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THE 


QUEENSLAND  FLORA 


RY 


F.  MANSON  BAILEY,  F.L.S., 

COLONIAL  BOTANIST  OK  QUKKNSLANI*. 


VVJ'i  H P LATHS  ILLUSTRATING  SOME  RARE  SPECIES. 


PART  II. 


roNX a i:,t < }■:./:  to  corx.o'F./E. 


t 

t 


J’WBIjTSHBU  IJXDEl,  THE  AUTHOKITY  01-  DIE  QC  KEN  SEAN  I » . 
GOVERNMENT. 


QUEENSLAND  : 

FEINTED  IJY  Jl.  -I.  1)1  EDAMS  ,v  CO..  ADELAIDE  STREET.  iilHSllVNE. 

I !>  0 0. 


/V/cT  ; 


Five  ShilliiK/s. 


■p. 


Digitized  by  the  Internet  Archive 
in  2016  with  funding  from 
BHL-SIL-FEDLINK 


https://archive.org/details/queenslandflora2190bail 


QUEENSLAND  FLORA 


13  V 


F.  MANSON  BAILEY,  F.L.S., 

COLONIAL  BOTANIST  OK  QUEENSLAND. 


WITH  PLATES  ILLUSTRATING  SOME  RARE  SPECIES. 


PART  II. 


cossahack.k  to  cons  a ck.k. 


LtttKAKY 
NEW  YOKt 

botanical 


PUBLISHED  UNDER  THE  AUTHORITY  OF  THE  QUEENSLAND 
GOVERNMENT. 


QUEENSLAND : 

PRINTED  BY  H.  J.  DIDDAMS  A (JO  ADELAIDE  STREET 


BRISBANE 


SKH'I3» 

•BS15 


|U,l- 


H.  .1.  UIDDAMS  AND  CO..  PRINTERS, 
APKLA.II>]'  STREET,  BRISBANE, 


LIST  OK  IMiATKS. 

(Continued! 


To  face  page 

Plate  XIII. — Daviesia  Wyattiana  ..  ..  ...  ..  ..  ..  348 

(Flowering  and  fruiting  shooti 

Plate  XIV. — Galactia  varians  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  •••  ••  430 

(,/,  Inflorescence  : b,  Flower  ; r,  Pod,  showing  seeds) 

Pi, ate  XV. — Mezoneurum  brachycavpum  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  451 

Fig.  1,  pair  of  pinna? : Fig.  2,  pod  ; Fig.  3,  seed  ; Fig.  4,  portion  of  stem 

anti  M.  Scovtechinii 

Fig.  5,  pair  of  pinme  ; Fig.  fi,  pod  : Fig.  7,  seed 


Plate  XVI. — Lower  portions  of  pods  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  455 

Fig.  1,  Cassia  Brewsteri ; Fig.  2,  C.  I(.  v.  sylvestris ; Fig.  3,  C.  B.  v.  tomentella:  Fig.  4, 

B.  var.  Marksiana. 

Plate  XVII: — Acacia  georginse  ..  ..  ..  ...  ...  ..  ..  495 

(Branchlet,  pod  and  seeds) 

Plate  XVIII. — Acacia  Piothii  ..  ...  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  .500 

(Fruiting  shoot  and  half  a pod  showing  seeds  in  positioni 

Plate  XIX. — Pygeuni  Turnerianam  ..  ..  ..  ...  ..  ..  525 

(Flowering  shoot,  fruit  and  stone) 

Plate  XX.- — Polyosina  rigidiuscula  ..  ..  ..  ..  ...  ..  .535 

(Fruiting  branch) 

Plate  XXI.  -Eucalyptus  Staigeriana  ...  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  022 

(Flowering  shoot  and  fruit) 

Plate  XXII. — Eucalyptus  platyphylla  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  ..  627 

(Flowering  shoot,  leaf  and  fruit) 

Plate  XXIII. — Syncarpia  Hillii  ...  ..  ...  ..  ..  ...  ..  639 

(Flowering  and  fruiting  shoots) 

Plate  XXIV. — La"erstroemia  Archeriana  ...  ..  ...  ..  ..  ..  678 

(Flower,  fruit  and  fruit  bursting) 

Plate  XXV.— Homaliura  circumpinnatum . . ...  ...  ..  ..  ..  686 

(Flowering  shoot) 


CONTMNTS. 


CONKKKCTUS  OK 

THE  OltliKUS 

OitnEt!  XLII. 

Connaraceic 

XLII1. 

Leguntinosm 

Sub-order  1.  Papilionace® 

2.  Csesalpiniea* 

3.  Mimosefe 

XLIV. 

Rosacea' 

XLV. 

Saxifragea*  . . 

XLV1. 

Crassulacca'  . . 

XL  VII. 

Droseraeen-  . . 

XL  VII I. 

Haloragefi' 

XLIX. 

IthizophoveaD 

L. 

Combretacea1 

LI. 

Myrtacese 

LII. 

Melastomacete 

I, III. 

Lythrariete  . . 

LIV. 

Onagraviese  . . 

LV. 

Samyilacete  . . 

LV1. 

Passitlore®  .. 

LVII. 

Cucurbitaeea" 

LVIII. 

Caoteoe 

LIX. 

Ficoide* 

LX. 

UmbelUier® . . 

LXI. 

Araliaceaa 

LXII. 

Cornace® 

Page 

326a 

327 

328 
3*21) 

333  *449 
334 
5*23 
530 

544 

545 
552 
559 
56*2 
571 
007 
071 
080 
684 
080 
090 

703 

704 
713 
7*27 
736 


Repeated  on  page  449  by  mistake 


Class  1.  DICOTYLEDONS. 

SUBCLASS  1.  POLY  PETALS . 

CoXTIXUEJL>._ 


Series  111.  CalycifLCk.e. — Stamens  and  petals  usually  inserted  on  the 

margin  of  a thin  disk  lining  the  base  or  the  whole  of  the  calyx-tube,  and  free 
from  the  ovary  unless  the  calyx-tube  is  also  adnate  to  it.  Stamens  definite  or 
indefinite.  Ovary  either  free  and  superior  or  enclosed  in  the  calyx  tube,  or 
inferior  and  adnate  to  the  calyx-tube. 

(In  Mimosta • and  a few  genera  of  Papilionaceo ■ and  V<esalpinie<c.  as  well  as  in  isolated  genera 
of  Sa.rifraycw  and  some  other  Orders,  the  stamen-bearing  disk  is  reduced  lo  a narrow  ring  or 
disappears  altogether.  The  distinction  between  Calycitlor<c  and  Thalanu flora  is  therefore 
general  only,  not  absolute. — Benth.) 

Alliance  XI.  Rosales.  Flown reyular  or  irreynlar.  usually  hermaphrodite. 
Stamens  more  or  less  distinctly  periyynous.  Styles  distinct . 

XL1J.  Cox  x a a \c  c. e . Flowers  regular.  Stamens  definite.  Ovary  ol'  from  1 to  5 free  carpels  ; 
ovules  2.  ascending,  orthotropous.  Fruit  often  a solitary  folliculate  carpel.  Albumen  frequent. 
Trees  or  shrubs,  often  climbing.  Leaves  alternate.  1 lo  8-foliolate  or  pinnate,  without  stipules. 

XLIII.  LtxiCMtxos.r:.  Trees,  shrubs,  or  herbs.  Leaves  alternate  or  rarely  opposite,  often 
compound.  Stipules  rarely  wanting.  Gyncecium  free,  consisting  of  a single  exccntrical  carpel 
with  a terminal  style,  the  ovules  inserted  along  the  upper  or  inner  angle  of  the  cavity.  Albumen 
usually  scanty  or  none. 

Suiiorder  I.  Pafieionace.e.  Flowers  irregular.  Petals  usually  5,  imbricate,  the  upper  one 
or  standard  outside.  Stamens  10.  rarely  fewer  by  abortion,  Radicle  curved  and  accumbent. 
rarely  straight. 

ScnoiiDEK  2.  C.esahuxie.e.  Flowers  irregular  or  nearly  regular.  Petals  5 or  fewer,  imbricate, 
the  upper  one  inside.  Stamens  (in  Australian  genera)  10  or  fewer.  Radicle  straight. 

Suuoudek  8.  Mr.MOSE/E.  Flowers  regular,  small,  in  spikes  or  heads.  Petals  5,  4.  or  rarely  3, 
valvate  or  rarely  slightly  imbricate.  Stamens  definite  or  indefinite.  Radicle  straight. 

XLIV.  Rosace*.  Shrubs  or  herbs.  Leaves  alternate,  with  stipules.  Flowers  regular. 
Stamens  usually  indefinite.  Carpels  of  the  gyneeciuni  1 or  several,  free  and  distinct,  or,  if 
adnate  to  the  calyx-tube,  either  distinct  or  combined  into  a single  ovary.  Styles  distinct. 
Albumen  usually  none. 

XLV.  Saxifrage*.  Shrubs  or  herbs.  Leaves  various,  with  or  without  stipules.  Flowers 
regular  or  nearly  so.  Stamens  definite  or  rarely  indefinite.  Carpels  of  the  gyncecium  usually 
united  into  a 1 or  several-celled  ovary,  at  least  at  the  base,  free  or  more  or  less  adnate  or 
inferior.  Styles  usually  distinct  or  readily  separable.  Albumen  usually  copious. 

XLVI.  Crassoeace*.  Herbs  with  succulent  leaves,  without  stipules.  Flowers  regular  and 
perfectly  isomerous.  Stamens  in  1 or  2 series.  Gyncecium  superior,  with  distinct  carpels. 
Seeds  albuminous. 

XLVII.  DroseracE/K.  Herbs.  Leaves  fringed  with  glandular  cilia.  Stipules  scarious  or 
none.  Flowers  regular.  Stamens  definite.  Ovary  free,  I -celled,  with  parietal  placentas. 
Styles  distinct  (except  llyblis).  Seeds  albuminous. 

XLVIII.  Halor age/e.  Herbs  aquatic  or  terrestrial.  Leaves  opposite  or  alternate,  without 
stipules.  Flowers  small,  regular,  often  milch  reduced.  Stamens  definite.  Ovary  inferior,  with 
as  many  cells  and  ovules  as  styles  or  rarely  fewer,  the  ovule  pendulous  from  the  apex  of  the  cell. 
Styles  or  sessile  stigmas  1 to  4.  distinct..  Seeds  albuminous. 

Alliance  XIX.  XVXyrtales.  Flowers  reyular  or  suhreyular:  usually  hermaphrodite. 
Pistils  syncarpous , interior  (or  free  in  some  Rhizophoraceaj).  Style  I.  Lea  res  simple. 

XLIX.  Rmzoi’Hon K*.  Trees  or  shrubs,  often  maritime,  with  opposite  leaves.  Stipule- 

deciduous.  Flowers  regular.  Calyx-lobes  valvate.  Petals  usually  notched  or  jagged.  Stamen 
twiee  a many  ar.  petal  or  more.  Ova i ) usually  inferior,  leveral  celled,  with  2 or  more  ovule 
pendulous  Imin  the  apex  ol  each  cell  Style  undivided  Seed  u ually  ■•oiir.ai'y,  with  or  without 
albumen.  • 


326 h 


DICOTYLEDONS. 


L.  Combretace.t..  Trees,  shrubs,  or  woody  climbers.  Leaves  opposite  or  alternate,  without 
stipules.  Flowers  regular  or  nearly  so.  Stamens  definite  or  rarely  indefinite.  Ovary  inferior, 

1 -celled,  with  2 or  more  |1  in  Gyrocarpus)  ovules  pendulous  from  the  apex  of  the  cavity.  Style 
undivided.  Seed  solitary,  without  albumen.  Cotyledons  convolute. 

LI.  Myhta.ce/E.  Trees  or  shrubs,  very  rarely  undershrubs.  Leaves  opposite  or  alternate, 
without  stipules,  usually  dotted.  Flowers  regular  or  nearly  so.  Calyx-lobes  usually  imbricate. 
Petals  imbricate.  Stamens  indefinite  or  rarely  definite;  anthers  opening  in  longitudinal  slits 
or  rarely  in  terminal  pores.  Ovary  inferior.  2 or  more-celled  with  2 or  more  ovules  in  each  cell, 
or  rarely  1-celled  with  1 placenta.  Style  undivided.  Seeds  without  albumen.  Cotyledons  flat 
or  folded,  not  convolute. 

LII.  MklastomacE/E.  Shrubs  or  rarely  trees  or  herbs.  Leaves  opposite,  not  dotted,  without 
stipules.  Flowers  regular  or  nearly  so.  Petals  contorted.  Stamens  definite ; anthers  opening 
in  terminal  pores,  very  rarely  in  longitudinal  slits.  Ovary  inferior  or  enclosed  in  the  calyx,  2 or 
more-celled,  with  2 or  more  ovules  in  each  cell,  or  rarely  1-celled  with  a central  placenta.  Style 
undivided.  Seeds  without  albumen.  Cotyledons  flat  or  folded,  not  convolute. 

L1I1.  Lythrakie.e.  Herbs,  shrubs,  or  trees.  Leaves  opposite  or  alternate,  without  stipules . 
Flowers  regular  or  nearly  so.  Calyx-lobes  valvate.  Petals  usually  crumpled  in  the  bud. 
Stamens  definite  or  rarely  indefinite.  Ovary  usually  enclosed  in  the  calyx-tube.  2 or  more- 
celled.  with  few  or  many  ovules  in  each  cell.  Style  undivided.  Seeds  without  albumen. 
Cotyledons  not  convolute. 

LIV.  Onagkakie.e.  Herbs  (in  the  Australian  genera).  Leaves  opposite  or  alternate,  without 
stipules.  Flowers  regular  or  nearly  so,  usually  4-merous.  Calyx-lobes  valvate.  Petals  im- 
bricate. Stamens  definite.  Ovary  inferior,  2 or  more-celled,  very  rarely  1-celled.  Style 
undivided.  Seeds  without  albumen. 

Alliance  XXXI.  Passiflorales. — Flower*  regular  or  irregular.  Stamen s perigynous 
(or  hypogynoits  in  some  Passiflorete).  Pistil  syncarpous.  Ovary  free  or  adnate,  1 -celled,  with 
parietal  placentation,  or  'S-celled  with  axile  placentation. 

LV.  Samydace.e.  Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  alternate.  Stipules  small  or  none.  Flowers 
regular  or  nearly  so.  Petals  and  sepals  nearly  similar.  Stamens  indefinite  or  alternating  with 
small  scales  or  glands.  Ovary  1-celled  with  parietal  placentas.  Style  entire  or  branched. 
Seeds  albuminous. 

LVI.  Passiflore*.  Climbers  (in  the  Australian  genera).  Leaves  alternate,  with  stipules- 
Flowers  regular.  Petals  persistent  with  the  calyx-lobes  and  often  resembling  them.  Stamens 
definite.  Ovary  stalked.  1-celled.  with  parietal  placentas.  Style  branched . Seeds  albuminous. 

LVII.  Cucurbit acE/E.  Herbs  either  prostrate  or  climbing  with  tendrils.  Leaves  alternate, 
without  stipules.  Flowers  unisexual,  regular.  Stamens  3 or  5.  Ovary  inferior,  at  first  1-celled. 
the  (3)  parietal  placentas  soon  meeting  in  the  axis  and  dividing  the  cavity  into  3 or  6 cells  or 
remaining  1 -celled  with  1 placenta.  Style  entire  or  branched.  Seeds  without  albumen. 

Alliance  XXV.  Ficoidales.—  Flowers  regular  or  nearly  so.  Ovary  syncarpous, 
tree  or  wholly  or  partially  adnate  : placentation  various.  Embryo  usually  curved. 

LVIII.  Cacte.e.  Leaves  represented  by  tufts  of  spines.  Flowers  solitary,  hermaphrodite. 
Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary ; lobes  3 or  many.  Petals  numerous.  Stamens  numerous, 
adnate  to  the  base  of  petals.  Ovary  1-celled.  Style  with  a 3 or  many-rayed  stigma.  Berry 
pulpy.  Seeds  numerous. 

LIX.  Ficoide.e.  Herbs  or  rarely  undershrubs.  sometimes  succulent.  Leaves  alternate  or 
rarely  opposite,  without  any  or  with  minute  scarious  stipules.  Petals  none  or  indefinite  and 
narrow.  Stamens  indefinite  or  rarely  definite.  Ovary  inferior  or  superior,  several-celled  (rarely 
reduced  to  1 cell).  Placentas  basal  or  nearly  so.  Styles  free  or  united  at  the  base.  Embryo 
curved  in  a mealy  albumen. 

Alliance  XV.  Umbellales.  Flowers  regular  (or  in  some  genera  the  outer  petals 
larger i.  Ovary  inferior , 2 or  ninny  celled  : orules  solitary,  pendulous.  Stamens  rarely  indefinite. 
Albumen  copious,  fleshy. 

LX.  Umbellifer.e.  Herbs,  rarely  shrubs  or  trees,  usually  with  divided  alternate  sheathing 
leaves  and  umbellate  flowers.  Ovary  2-celled  ; styles  2.  Carpels  dry  in  fruit,  indehiscent  and 
separating. 

LX1.  Araliace/£.  Shrubs  or  trees,  with  alternate  divided  leaves  and  umbellate  capitate 
racemous  or  spicate  (lowers.  Ovary  2 or  manv-celled.  Fruit  dry  or  drupaceous,  not  separating 
into  its  constituent  carpels. 

LXII.  Corkage.*.  Trees,  shrubs,  or  rarely  herbs.  Leaves  opposite  or  rarely  (as  in  the 
Australian  genus)  alternate,  without  stipules.  Petal  valvate.  Stamen  a many  or  twice  u 
many  u-_  petal  . Ovary  inferior.  1 or  2-celleJ  with  one  pendulous  ovule  in  each  cell.  Style 
simple.  Seeds  albuminous,  the  embryo  nearly  as  long  as  the  albumen. 


Lt»KA»CT 

MEW 

BOTANIC  AS, 

oaxubm 


THE  QUEENSLAND  FLORA. 


Order  XLII.  CONNARACEjE. 

Flowers  usually  hermaphrodite,  regular  or  nearly  so.  Calyx  5-fid,  or  4 or 
5-partite,  often  persistent,  valvate  or  imbricate.  Petals  5,  ligulate  and  longer 
than  the  calyx  or  rotundate-cuneate  and  shorter,  usually  imbricate,  free  or 
slightly  coherent.  Stamens  perigynous  or  hypogynous,  5 or  more  usually  10, 
the  alternate  ones  in  that  case  (those  opposite  the  petals)  considerably  shorter 
than  the  others  and  frequently  imperfect ; filaments  filiform,  often  monadelphous 
at  the  base  ; anthers  short,  didymous,  the  dehiscence  introrse,  sometimes  turned 
round  at  length.  Disk  none  or  thin,  surrounded  by  the  base  of  the  stamens. 
Carpels  usually  5,  rarely  1 to  3,  hairy,  1-celled.  Style  subulate  or  filiform  ; 
stigma  subcapitate,  simple  or  2-lobed.  Ovules  2,  collateral,  ascending  from  the 
base  of  the  inner  angle  of  the  cell,  orthotropous.  Capsule  usually  solitary,  sessile 
or  stipitate,  follicular,  dehiscing  usually  in  front,  rarely  on  the  back,  1 or  very 
rarely  2-seeded.  Seeds  erect,  with  or  without  an  arillus  or  with  the  testa 
arilliform  below  the  middle.  Embryo  either  exalbuminous  with  amygdaloid 
cotyledons  or  albuminous  with  foliaceous  cotyledons,  the  radicle  superior  or  very 
rarely  ventral. — Trees  or  climbing  or  erect  shrubs.  Leaves  persistent  or  deci- 
duous, alternate,  exstipulate,  simple  or  imparipinnate,  with  1 or  many  pairs  of 
leaflets  ; leaflets  subcoriaceous  or  coriaceous,  always  entire.  Flowers  small  and 
inconspicuous,  racemose  or  paniculate.  Capsule  glabrous  or  pilose  internally. — 
Benth.  and  Hook.  Gen.  PI.  and  J.  G.  Baker  in  FI.  Trop.  Africa. 

A small  Order,  universally  dispersed  through  the  tropics  and  scarcely  passing  beyond  them. 

Tribe  I.  Connarea s.— Sepals  imbricate  in  (estivation.  Seeds  exalbuminous,  arillate. 

Calyx  clasping  the  fruit  or  its  stalk.  Capsule  sessile,  the  fruit-calyx  dilated  . 1.  Rourea. 

Tribe  II  Cnestideae. — Sepals  valvate  in  (estivation.  Seeds  albuminous. 

Calyx  5-partite.  Stamens  10.  Carpel  1.  Capsule  pubescent  inside  ....  2.  Tricholobds. 


1.  ROUREA,  Aubl. 

(Cayenne  name.) 

Calyx  5-partite,  lobes  orbicular,  imbricate,  enlarged  and  clasping  the  base  of 
the  ripe  capsule.  Petals  5,  usually  linear-oblong.  Stamens  10;  filaments  fili- 
form, connate  in  a ring  at  the  base.  Anthers  didymous.  Ovaries  5,  4 usually 
imperfect,  styliform  ; fertile  style  straight,  subulate,  slender  ; stigma  capitellate. 
Capsule  sessile,  curved,  1-seedod,  chartaceous.  Seed  erect,  arillate,  exalbuminous. 


Part  IJ.  B 


328 


XLII.  CONNARACE/E. 


[Rourea. 


— Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  alternate,  coriaceous,  imparipinnate ; leaflets  sub- 
opposite or  alternate,  often  small  and  multijugate.  Panicles  axillary.  Flowers 
small.  Pedicels  slender. 

Species  about  43,  inhabiting  the  tropics  of  Asia,  Africa,  America,  and  Australia. — From  Gen. 
Plant.,  Ben tli.  and  Hook. 

1.  R.  brachyandra  (short  stamens),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  viii.  6,  x.  119.  A 
glabrous  lofty  climber.  Leaves  alternate,  petiole  and  rhachis  slender.  Leaflets 
3 or  5,  2 to  5in.  long,  coriaceo-chartaceous,  lanceolate-ovate,  shining  on  both 
sides,  the  nerves  and  veins  conspicuous.  Petioles  1 to  1^-in.  long,  the  petiolules 
about  1A  line  long.  Panicles  racemose,  axillary,  and  lateral.  Pedicels  about  as 
long  as  the  calyx.  Bracteoles  subulate-lanceolate.  Calyx-lobes  5,  rhomboid- 
ovate,  scarcely  line  long.  Petals  5,  imbricate,  white,  obtuse  oblong  or 
spathulate,  semi-exserted,  glabrous,  cohering  at  the  base.  Stamens  10,  short, 
scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx.  Style  and  ovary  very  short. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallacliy,  and  Daintree  River,  E.  Fitzalan  (F.  v.  M.,  l.c.) ; Barron 
River  scrubs,  E.  Cowley. 


2.  TRICHOLOBUS,  Blume. 

(Hairy-lobed.) 

Flowers  hermaphrodite.  Calyx  5-partite,  valvate.  Petals  5,  much  longer 
than  the  calyx,  linear-lanceolate,  valvate.  Stamens  10,  5 longer  and  sometimes 
without  anthers ; filaments  subulate-filiform,  connate  at  the  base.  Carpel  1, 
sessile,  villous  ; style  short,  filiform,  stigma  dilated.  Capsule  sessile,  coriaceous, 
obovate-oblong,  compressed,  densely  covered  inside  and  out  with  itching  hairs. 
Seeds  arillate.  Leaves  imparipinnate,  the  young  ones  densely  fulvous-lanuginous. 
Leaflets  oblong  acuminate.  Panicles  terminal,  very  densely  lanuginous.  Flowers 
small,  shortly  pedicellate,  pedicels  1-bracteate.  Capsule  large. — Benth.  and 
Hook.  Gen.  Plant,  i,  433. 

Species  few,  in  the  Indian  Archipelago  and  Australia. 

1.  T.  connaroides  (Connarus-like),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  viii.  224.  A strong 
woody  climber,  the  branches  rough  with  lenticell*.  Leaflets  3 to  5,  oblong,  5 to 
8in.  long,  2 or  3in.  broad,  densely  rusty-tomentose  when  young.  Inflorescence 
ferruginous-tomentose,  the  panicles  often  in  clusters  on  the  old  wood,  of  irregular 
length  in  each  cluster ; the  panicles  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves  of  the  new  wood 
usually  single  and  larger  than  the  clustered  ones,  about  3in.  long.  Pedicels  often 
very  short.  Bracts  about  1|  line  long,  narrow.  Sepals  narrow  or  oblong- 
lanceolate,  1|  line  long.  Petals  pilose,  glandular-punctate.  Filaments  united  at 
the  base.  Anthers  minute,  didymous-rotund,  style  about  2 lines  long.  Follicle- 
like capsule,  obliquely  pyriform,  red  and  obliquely  nerved,  about  lin.  long 
and  nearly  as  broad,  the  old  ones  glabrous  outside,  clothed  with  short  golden 
hairs  inside.  Seeds  solitary,  flat,  about  6 lines  long  and  nearly  as  broad, 
ai'illate. 

Hab.:  Climbing  over  the  trees  along  the  rivers  and  creeks  of  the  tropical  parts  of  Queensland. 


Order  XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 

Calyx  of  5 or  rarely  fewer,  usually  united  sepals,  companulate  or  tubular, 
more  or  less  divided  into  5 or  fewer  teeth  or  lobes,  or  rarely  the  sepals  entirely 
distinct.  Corolla  of  5 or  rarely  fewer  petals,  perigynous  or  rarely  hypogynous, 
very  irregular  in  the  first  suborder,  less  so  in  the  second,  small,  regular,  and  the 
petals  often  united  in  the  third.  Stamens  twice  the  number  of  petals,  rarely 
fewer  or  sometimes  indefinite,  inserted  with  the  petals.  Ovary  single  (consisting 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


329 


of  a single  carpel),  with  1,  2,  or  more  ovules  arranged  along  the  inner  or  upper 
angle  of  the  cavity  ; style  simple.  Fruit  a pod,  usually  flatfish  and  opening 
round  the  margin  in  2 valves,  but  sometimes  follicular  or  indehiscent,  or  variously 
shaped.  Seeds  with  2 large  cotyledons,  a short  radicle,  and,  with  few.  exceptions, 
little  or  no  albumen. — Herbs,  shrubs,  trees,  or  climbers.  Leaves  alternate  or 
(chiefly  in  some  Australian  genera)  opposite,  usually  furnished  with  stipules, 
compound  or  reduced  to  a single  leaflet,  or  to  a dilated  petiole,  or  in  a few  cases 
really  simple,  the  leaflets  or  leaves  entire  or  rarely  toothed  or  lobed.  Flowers 
in  axillary  or  terminal  racemes,  spikes  or  clusters,  when  terminal  often  becoming 
leaf-opposed  by  the  growth  of  a lateral  shoot,  rarely  solitary  and  axillary. 

The  largest  Natural  Order  of  Phoenogamous  plants  next  to  Composite,  and  widely  distributed 
over  the  whole  surface  of  the  globe.  Out  of  the  95  following  genera,  35  are  dispersed 
over  the  warmer,  chiefly  tropical  regions  of  both  the  New  and  the  Old  World  ; the  19  other 
tropical  genera  are  chiefly  in  Africa  and  Asia  ; 1 0 genera  belong  to  the  temperate  regions  of  the 
northern  hemisphere;  1 (Clianthus)  extends  only  to  New  Zealand,  and  30  are  endemic  in 
Australia. 

The  genera  marked  with  an  asterisk  in  the  following  table  are  those  which  are  mentioned  only 
as  introduced,  not  described  as  indigenous. 


Suborder  I.  PAPILIONACE.E. 

Sepals  united  in  a campanulate  or  tubular  calyx,  5-toothed  or  cleft,  or 
4-toothed  by  the  complete  union  of  the  2 upper  sepals,  or  2-lobed,  the  lobe  or 
lip  entire  or  2-toothed,  the  lower  entire  or  3-toothed,  rarely  irregularly  split. 
Corolla  very  irregular,  usually  papilionaceous,  that  is  of  5 petals,  the  upper  one  or 
standard  ( vexillum ) outside  in  the  bud,  the  2 lateral  ones  or  wings  (ala)  inter- 
mediate. the  2 lowest  ones  more  or  less  united  along  the  lower  edge  or 
approximate,  face  to  face,  into  a boat-shaped  keel  ( carina ),  more  or  less  enclosing 
the  stamens  and  style.  Stamens  usually  10,  either  all  free  or  all  united  in  a tube 
or  sheath,  enclosing  the  style,  closed  or  open  along  the  upper  edge,  or  the  upper 
stamen  more  or  less  free  from  the  others,  the  filaments  all  free  for  some  distance 
under  the  anthers.  Ovules  usually  amphitropous  (half  inverted),  and  the  radicle 
of  the  embryo  more  or  less  curved  over  the  edge  of  the  cotyledons,  rarely  short 
and  straight. 

The  subdivision  of  this  large  suborder  into  tribes  is  attended  with  very  great  difficulties,  nor 
has  any  one  character  by  which  it  has  yet  been  attempted  proved  constant.  Those  here  adopted 
are  such  as  have  appeared  the  least  objectionable,  but  there  are  connecting  genera  between  all  of 
them. — Benth. 

Tribe  I.  Podalyrieae. — Shrubs,  rarely  herbs  or  small  trees.  Leaves  simple  or  digitately 
compound  (except  in  a few  Gompholobiums  and  Burtoniasj,  without  stipellce.  Stamens  all  free  or 
scarcely  united  at  the  base.  Pod  not  articulate. 

Standard  small  or  narrow.  Ovules  4 or  more.  Flowers  not  in  heads. 

Upper  lobes  of  the  calyx  as  large  as  or  larger  than  the  others.  Leaves 

simple,  opposite  alternate  or  none 1.  Brachysema. 

Standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  large.  Ovules  4 or  more  (except  in  a few 
Mirbelias). 

Calyx-lobes  shorter  or  scarcely  longer  than  the  tube.  Leaves  simple  or 


none. 

Ovary  not  divided  longitudinally. 

Keel  about  as  long  as  the  wings.  Leaves  usually  more  or  less 

opposite  or  verticellate 2.  Oxylobium. 

Keel  shorter  than  the  wings  or  beaked.  Leaves  alternate  ....  3.  Chorizema. 

Ovary  and  pod  divided  by  a longitudinal  partition 4.  Mirbelia. 

ilyx-lobes  much  longer  than  the  tube. 

Calyx-lobes  imbricate.  Ovary  sessile.  Funicles  short  or  slender. 

Pod  oblong-linear.  Leaves  simple  or  unifoliolate 5.  Isotropir. 

Calyx-lobes  valvate.  Ovary  stipitate.  Funicles  long  and  thick,  all 
folded  or  curved  downwards.  Pod  globular.  Leaves  pinnate, 
digitately  3 to  5-foliolate,  or  simple (5.  Gompholobium, 


880 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS/E. 


Standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  large.  Ovules  2. 

Calyx-lobes  much  longer  than  the  tube,  valvate. 

Funicles  long  and  thick,  one  folded  or  curved  upwards,  the  other 
downwards.  Pod  globular  or  nearly  so.  Leaves  pinnate,  digitately 
3 to  5-foliolate  or  simple 7.  Burtonia. 

Funicles  short  and  slender.  Pod  flattened  or  oblong.  Leaves  none 

or  very  rarely  1-foliolate 8.  Jacksonia. 

Calyx-lobes  shorter  than  the  tube,  or,  if  longer,  imbricate  or  open  in  the 
bud. 

Pod  nearly  globular,  usually  stipitate.  Strophiole  none.  Calyx  upper 
lip  very  large.  Petals  nearly  sessile.  Leaves  simple  and  narrow 
or  none 9.  Spherolobiuai. 

Pod  sessile,  ovoid,  small,  and  indehiscent.  Calyx  shortly  5-toothed. 

Leaves  reduced  to  a long  petiole,  with  or  without  1 or  3 digitate 

leaflets 10.  Viminaria. 

Pod  triangular,  2-valved.  Seeds  strophiolate.  Calyx  shortly  5- 

toothed.  Leaves  simple,  alternate  or  none 11.  Daviesia. 

Pod  ovate  or  oblong,  2-valved.  Calyx  5-lobed  or  toothed  or  2-lipped. 

Leaves  simple,  sessile  or  shortly  petiolate. 

Leaves  flat  or  folded  lengthwise,  or  with  revolute  margins,  or,  if 
terete,  channelled  underneath. 

Bracteoles  none  or  very  deciduous. 


No  strophiole.  No  stipules.  Flowers  1 to  3 in  each  axil  . . 12.  Aotus. 

Seeds  strophiolate.  Stipules  often  present.  Flowers  in  racemes 

or  dense  axillary  clusters 14  Gastrolobium. 

Bracteoles  persistent  close  under  the  calyx,  or  adnate  to  it. 

No  strophiole.  No  stipules.  Filaments  some  or  all  united 

with  the  petals  at  the  base 13.  Phyllota. 

Seeds  strophiolate.  Stipules  usually  (not  always)  present. 

Filaments  free 15.  Pdltenea. 

Leaves  concave  or  with  incurved  or  involute  margins,  or,  if  terete, 
channelled  above.  Seeds  strophiolate. 

Bracteoles  persistent  close  under  the  calyx  or  adnate  to  it. 

Stipules  usually  present 15.  Pdltenea. 

Bracteoles  none  or  at  a distance  from  the  calyx,  and  usually  very 
small.  Stipules  none  or  minute.  Calyx  more  or  less  2-lipped, 
or  the  upper  lobes  broad.  Pod  ovate,  flat  or  turgid.  Leaves 
alternate  or  crowded.  Standard  usually  very  broad  . . . .16.  Dillwynia. 


(Barklya  has  simple  or  rather  1-foliolate  leaves  and  the  stamens  free ; but  it  is  a large  tree, 
with  small  nearly  regular  flowers.) 

Tribe  II.  Crenisteae. — Shrubs  or  herbs,  very  rarely  small  trees.  Leaves  simple  or  with  1 or 
3 or  more  digitate  leaflets  ( except  Goodia).  Stamens  all  united  in  a sheath  open  on  the  upper  side 
in  all  the  Australian  genera  ( except  in  one  species  of  Hovea),  or  in  a closed  tube  in  several 
European  and  African  genera.  Pod  dehiscent,  not  articulate. 

Leaves  all  simple  or  none.  Flowers  axillary,  solitary  or  clustered.  Seeds 


strophiolate. 

Anthers  uniform.  Pod  very  flat. 

Upper  suture  of  the  pod  bordered  by  a narrow  wing  and  not  splitting, 

the  valves  rolling  back  upon  it  elastically.  Leaves  opposite  . . .17.  Platylobium. 

Pod  not  winged,  opening  at  both  sutures.  Leaves  opposite  or  alternate  18.  Bossiea. 

Anthers  alternately  longer  and  shorter.  Leaves  alternate  or  none. 

Pod  at  least  twice  as  long  as  broad,  with  coriaceous  convex  valves. 

Flowers  red,  yellow,  or  reddish-purple 19.  Templetonia. 

Pod  turgid,  scarcely  longer  than  broad.  Flowers  blue  or  bluish- 
purple  20.  Hovea. 

Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate.  Flowers  in  terminal  or  leaf-opposed  racemes. 

Seeds  strophiolate 21.  Goodia. 

Leaves  digitate  or  simple.  Flowers  or  racemes  terminal  or  leaf -opposed. 

Seeds  not  strophiolate. 

Anthers  alternately  longer  and  shorter.  Style  (often  very  minutely) 
bearded  under  the  stigma. 

Keel  acute  or  beaked.  Pod  turgid 22.  Crotalaria. 


Tube  of  stamens  not  slit  along  the  top.  Calyx-teeth  much  exceeding  the 

tube.  Wings  connate  at  the  apex.  Keel  rostrate 23.  ’Lupinds. 

(Flemingia,  and  a very  few  species  of  other  genera  of  Phaseolece,  have  3 digitate  leaflets,  but 
may  readily  be  distinguished  from  Genistew,  either  by  their  upper  stamen  free  or  by  the  twining 
herbaceous  stems.  Some  species  of  Psoralea  and  Indigofer  a,  with  digitate  leaves,  may  be 
known,  the  former  by  their  ovary  and  pod,  the  latter  by  the  stamens  and  anthers. — Benth,) 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


3B1 


Tribe  III.  Trifolieas. — Herbs,  very  rarely  shrubs.  Leaflets  usually  3,  pinnate  or  rarely 
digitate,  the  veinlets  extending  to  the  edge  and  often  produced  into  minute  teeth.  Peduncles, 
racemes,  or  flower-heads  axillary  (or  apparently  terminal  by  the  reduction  of  the  upper  floral 
leaves ),  never  leaf-opposed.  Upper  stamen  free,  the  others  united  in  a slieatli.  Ovules  2 or  more. 


Pod  not  articulate. 

Keel  obtuse.  Upper  stamen  free. 

Petals  free  from  the  staminal  tube. 

Pod  straight,  or  falcate,  or  undulate,  linear,  or  fiat,  or  beaked  . . . 24.  Trigonella. 

Pod  spiral  (rarely  small,  curved  and  1-seeded) 25.  *Medicago. 

Pod  small,  thick,  straight,  and  indehiscent 26.  *Melilotus. 

All  the  petals,  or  the  4 lower  ones,  with  their  claws  adnate  to  the  base 

of  the  staminal  tube.  Pod  usually  included  in  the  calyx 27.  *Trifolium. 


Tribe  IV.  Euloteae. — Herbs,  rarely  shrubs.  Leaves  pinnate,  or  sometimes  apparently 
digitately  3-foliolate,  the  ■ lowest  pair  of  leaflets  taking  the  place  of  stipules ; leaflets  entire. 
Flowers  capitate  or  umbellate  on  axillary  pteduncles.  Upper  stamen  usually  free,  at  least  at  the 
base,  the  others  united  in  a sheath  ; filaments  either  all  or  5 only  dilated  towards  the  end.  Pod 
not  articulate. 

Leaflets  5,  the  2 lowest  taking  the  place  of  stipules.  Keel  beaked  . . . 28.  Lotus. 

Tribe  V.  Craleg'ese. — Herbs  not  twining,  shrubs,  or  rarely  trees  or  tall  ivoody  climbers. 
Leaves  pinnate,  rarely  reduced  to  3 or  1 leaflets.  Stipellce  none,  or  setaceous  in  a few  pinnate 
genera.  Upper  stamen  usually  free,  at  least  at  the  base,  the  others  united  in  a sheath,  very  rarely 
all  united  ; filaments  filiform.  Ovules  2 or  more  ( except  in  Indigofera  linifolia  and  in  Psoralea). 
Pod  not  articulate,  2 -valued  ( except  Psoralea). 

Ovule  1.  Fruit  small,  the  pericarp  adhering  to  the  seed.  Herbs  or  shrubs 
with  black  glandular  dots.  Leaflets  (in  Australia)  1 or  3,  sometimes 


toothed 29.  Psoralea. 

Ovules  2 or  more  (1  in  I.  linifolia).  Anthers  tipped  with  a small  gland. 

Pod  2-valved.  Herbs  or  shrubs,  sometimes  glandular.  Leaflets  entire. 

Hairs  often  appressed  and  attached  by  the  centre 30.  Indigofera. 

Ovules  2 or  more.  Anthers  without  glands. 

Racemes  or  flowers  terminal  or  leaf-opposed.  Herbs  or  shrubs. 

Stamens  all  united  in  a sheath,  open  on  the  upper  side. 

Leaflets  3.  Flowers  in  racemes.  Seeds  strophiolate 21.  Goodia. 

Leaflets  few.  Petals  not  exceeding  the  deeply  lobed  calyx.  Seeds 

strophiolate,  with  a straight  radicle 31.  Laaiprolobum. 

Leaves  imparipinnate ; stipules  semi-sagittate.  Stamens  mona- 

delphous.  Pod  terete 32.  *Galega. 

Upper  stamens  usually  free,  or  all  united  in  a closed  tube  ....  33.  Tephrosia. 

Kacemes  in  a terminal  panicle.  Tall  woody  climbers.  Pod  hard  . . 34.  Millettia. 


Kacemes  or  flowers  axillary.  Herbs  or  shrubs. 

Style  not  bearded  (rarely  a small  tuft  of  hairs  on  the  stigma  in 


Tephrosia). 

Pod  linear,  rarely  short  and  oblong ; valves  thin  or  coriaceous,  flat 

or  convex  when  ripe 33.  Tephrosia. 

Pod  long,  narrow  and  thick,  the  endocarp  continuous  with  the 

transverse  partitions  between  the  seeds 35.  Sesbania. 

Pod  1-seeded  (ovules  2),  muricate.  Plant  glandular.  Anthers  with 
confluent  cells  opening  in  unequal  valves 38.  Glycyrrhiza. 

Style  bearded  under  the  stigma.  Pod  turgid,  membranous  or 
coriaceous. 

Petals  acuminate 36.  Clianthus. 

Petals  obtuse 37.  Swainsona. 


( Abrus , and  a very  few  pinnate-leaved  Phaseolea;,  may  have  the  technical  characters  of 
Galege ce,  but  are  distinguished  by  their  herbaceous  more  or  less  twining  stems.) 

Tribe  VI.  Hedysareae. — Pod  separating  into  1 -seeded  articles,  or  the  whole  pod  1-seeded 
and  indehiscent  (except  Pycnospora),  and  rarely  Desmodium).  foliage  and  inflorescence,  in  the 
Australian  genera,  either  of  Galegess  or  of  Phaseoleee. 

Leaves  pinnate  with  several  leaflets,  as  in  Galegece.  Stamens  united  in  a 
sheath,  or  in  2 bundles  of  5 each. 

Tall  shrubs.  Articles  of  the  pod  oblong,  striate 39.  Ormocarpum. 

Herbs.  Articles  of  the  pod  square  or  semiorbicular,  flat 40.  jGschynomene. 

Herbs.  Articles  of  the  pod  folded  over  each  other  within  the  calyx  . . 41.  Smithia. 

Pod  ripening  beneath  the  soil,  oblong,  reticulate,  indehiscent,  subtoru- 

lose,  continuous  within.  Seeds  1 to  3 42.  * Arachis. 

Leaves  with  2 leaflets.  Bracteoles  large,  enclosing  the  flowers.  Stamens 
all  united.  Anthers  alternately  long  and  short 43.  Zoknia. 


332 


X.LIII.  LEGUMINOS^. 


Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate  or  1-foliolate,  with  stipellse  as  in  Phaseolea. 

Stipules  usually  dry. 

Pod  flat,  not  folded 44.  Desmodium. 

Pod  turgid,  not  articulate,  but  with  transverse  lines 45.  Pycnospora. 

Pod-articles  folded  over  each  other  within  the  calyx.  Calyx-tube  small, 

lobes  subulate 46.  Uraria. 

Pod-articles  globular,  oblong-terete,  or  slightly  flattened  but  thick.  Calyx 

narrow,  dry,  deeply  lobed.  Leaves  1-foliolate 47.  Alysicarpus. 

Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate,  rarely  1-foliolate,  without  stipell®.  Ovule  1. 

Pod  1-seeded,  flat,  indehiscent 48.  Lespedeza. 


Tkire  VII.  Vicieae. — Herbs.  Leaves  abruptly  pinnate,  the  common  petiole  usually  ending 
in  a tendril  or  fine  point.  Flowers  and  fruit  of  Phaseoleee.  Peduncles  or  racemes  axillary. 

Style  with  a tuft  of  hairs  at  the  top  on  the  outside  or  all  round  (not  bearded 

longitudinally  inside) ■.  . 49.  *Vicia. 

Twiners.  Leaves  abruptly  pinnate  with  small  leaflets.  Upper  stamen 

wanting,  the  other  9 united  in  a sheath  open  on  the  upper  side  . . . 50.  Abhus. 

Tribe  VIII.  Phaseoleas. — Herbs  usually  twining  or  prostrate,  rarely  erect  or  shrubby  at 
the  base,  very  rarely  trees.  Leaves  pinnately  H-foliolate  or  1-foliolate,  rarely  5 or  1-foliolate,  with 
stipellee  (digitate  in  Flemingia  and  a very  few  species  of  other  genera,  stipellce  minute  or  none  in 
Rhynchosia  and  its  allies).  Upper  stamen  usually  free,  at  least  at  the  base  or  all  but  the  base. 
Anthers  uniform  or  nearly  so  ( except  in  Mucuna).  Pod  not  articulate,  2-valved.  Cotyledons 
usually  thick  and  fleshy. 

Flowers  in  axillary  short  clusters  with  persistent  striate  bracts  and 


bracteoles.  Seeds  not  strophiolate. 

Calyx  tubular 51.  Clitoria. 

Calyx  campanulate 62.  Dolichos. 

Flowers  pedunculate,  umbellate,  or  racemose,  the  rhachis  not  nodose. 

Bracts  persistent  or  deciduous.  Seeds  strophiolate. 

Flowers  red,  in  1 or  2 pairs  or  in  umbels  or  in  short  racemes  ....  54.  Kennedya. 

Flowers  small,  blue  or  purple,  in  loose  racemes.  Keel  usually  small  . 53.  Hardenbergia. 

Flowers  small,  single,  scattered  in  a loose  raceme,  the  rhachis  not  nodose. 

Bracts  small,  deciduous.  (Lower  flowers  often  solitary  in  the  axils.) 

Seeds  not  strophiolate 52.  Glycine. 

Trees  or  tall  erect  herbs  with  conical  prickles.  Flowers  large,  red.  Wings 

very  short 55.  Erythrina. 

Twiners,  habit  of  Phaseolus.  Flowers  red.  Standard  and  keel  equal. 

Wings  short 56.  Strongylodon. 

Anthers  alternately  long  and  short.  Flowers  large,  purple,  yellow,  or 

white.  Standard  short.  Keel  acuminate 57.  Mucuna. 


Twining  or  erect  at  the  base,  not  glandular.  Flowers  in  pairs  or  clusters 
along  or  at  the  top  of  a common  peduncle,  the  rhachis  of  the  cluster 
gland-like  or  forming  a protruding  node.  Bracts  deciduous  or  none. 


Anthers  uniform. 

Style  beardless. 

Calyx-lobes  4 (the  upper  one  of  2 united),  acuminate 58.  Galactia. 

Calyx  2 upper  lobes  united  in  a large  upper  lip,  the  3 lower  minute  . 59.  Canavalia. 
Style  bearded  under  the  stigma. 

Stigma  oblique  or  lateral. 

Keel  spirally  twisted 60.  Phaseolus. 

Keel  straight,  or  with  a curved  beak  not  forming  a complete  spire  . 61.  Viona. 
Stigma  small,  terminal 62.  Dolichos. 


Twining  or  erect.  Flowers  racemose,  umbellate,  or  solitary,  the  rhachis 
not  nodose.  Bracts  usually  membranous  and  deciduous.  Stipellee 


usually  minute  or  none.  Style  beardless.  Upper  stamen  free. 

Ovules  4 or  more. 

Pod  very  flat,  obliquely  acuminate 63.  Dunbaria. 

Pod  flattened,  very  obtuse,  with  transverse  lines  or  depressions  between 
the  seeds 64.  Atylosia. 

Ovules  2 or  rarely  1. 

Pod  flattened.  Hilum  of  the  seed  parallel  to  the  suture  with  a central 

funicle 65.  Rhynchosia. 

Pod  flattened.  Seed  obliquely  transverse,  the  funicle  attached  to  one 

end  of  the  hilum.  Standard  usually  very  silky 66.  Eriosema. 

Pod  turgid.  Leaflets  digitate 67.  Flemingia. 


Tribe  IX. — Dalbergiea. — Trees  or  woody  climbers.  Leaves  pinnate  with  5 or  more 
leaflets  or  sometimes  1 leaflet,  very  rarely  3.  Stipellee  none  or  small  and  subulate.  Stamens  all 
united  in  a sheath  or  tube,  or  into  two  parcels  of  5,  very  rarely  the  upper  one  free.  Pod  indehiscent. 


XLIII.  LEGUMlNOSiE. 


333 


Anthers  small,  erect,  didymous,  opening  at  the  top.  Flowers  small,  in 

cymes  or  short  panicles.  Pod  flat  and  thin 68.  Dalbergia. 

Anthers  opening  longitudinally.  Flowers  racemose. 

Pod  flat  and  thin,  not  winged 69.  Lonchocarpus. 

Pod  flat,  thin  or  coriaceous,  one  or  both  sutures  edged  with  a narrow 

wing 70.  Derris. 

Pod  flattened  but  thick,  with  obtuse  sutures 71.  Pongamia. 


(Millettia  is  closely  allied  to  Lonchocarpus,  but  has  a dehiscent  2-valved  pod.) 

Tribe  X.  Sophorete — Trees,  woody  climbers,  or  rarely  tall  shrubs  or  almost  herbaceous. 
Leaves  pinnate,  with  several  leaflets,  without  stipellce,  or  reduced  to  a large  leaflet.  Stamens  all 


free  or  scarcely  united  at  the  base. 

Leaves  pinnate. 

Corolla  papilionaceous.  Pod  terete  or  4-angled,  moniliform  . . . .72.  Sophora. 

Inflorescence  terminal ; petals  clawed.  Pod  stipitate,  3 to  4in.  long ; 

seeds  1 to  4,  oblong,  red,  5 lines  long 73.  Podopetalum. 

Corollp,  papilionaceous  or  nearly  so.  Pod  large,  hard,  almost  woody, 

spongy  inside 74.  Castanospermum. 

Leaves  1-foliolate.  Corolla  small,  nearly  regular,  the  upper  petal  outside. 

Pod  flat  and  thin 75.  Barklya. 


(A  few  species  of  Gompholobium  and  Burtonia  have  pinnate  leaves,  but  with  the  habit  and  small 
leaflets  of  Podalyrieee.) 


Suborder  II.  OESALPINIE^E. 

Flowers  usually  5-merous,  very  rarely  4-merous  or  3-merous,  the  sepals  united 
at  the  base  into  a short  tube,  lined  by  the  disk,  bearing  at  its  margin  the  petals 
and  stamens,  rarely  forming  a campanulate  or  tubular  calyx  with  the  stamens 
near  the  base,  as  in  Papilionacece,  the  free  part  of  the  sepals  or  lobes  of  the  calyx 
imbricate  or  rarely  valvate.  Corolla  irregular  or  nearly  regular,  either  with  the 
5 (or  4 or  3)  petals  variously  imbricate  in  the  bud,  but  the  upper  one  never 
outside,  and  usually  quite  inside,  or  in  genera  not  Australian,  some  or  all  of  the 
four  lower  petals  wanting.  Stamens  10  or  fewer,  or  in  genera  not  Australian, 
indefinite,  free,  or  rarely  more  or  less  united,  all  perfect  or  several  of  them 
reduced  to  staminodia.  Ovules  anatropous  or  nearly  so.  Radicle  of  the  embryo 
short  and  straight. 

Tribe  XI.  Eucscsalpinieac. — Leaves  bipinnate  ; calyx  divided  to  the  disk  ; petals 
usually  5,  subequal  or  but  slightly  unequal ; stamens  10 

Leaves  twice  pinnate,  often  with  hooked  prickles.  Stamens  10,  all  bearing  anthers. 


Ovules  2 or  more.  Stigma  small. 

Pod  ovate,  or  ovate-oblong,  or  linear-falcate,  compressed,  covered 

with  or  without  prickles  or  wings,  2-valved 76.  Cjesalpinia. 

Pod  flat,  thin  or  coriaceous,  the  upper  suture  winged 77.  Mezoneurum. 

Ovule  1.  Pod  samara-like,  with  a terminal  wing 78.  Pterolobium. 

Ovules  2 or  more.  Stigma  large,  peltate.  Pod  oblong-lanceolate,  flat 

and  thin,  indehiscent 79.  Peltobhorum. 

Leaves  with  2 to  6 pinnse  from  a very  short  rhachis.  Leaflets  minute, 
oblong-lanceolate.  Pod  narrow,  moniliform 80.  *Parkinsonia. 

Tribe  XII.  Cassiese. — Leaves  simply  pinnate.  Sepals  5,  distinct,  or  calyx-lobes  free  to  the 


disk.  Petals  5,  or  fewer,  or  none.  Stamens  2 to  10.  Anthers  basi  or  dorsiflxed. 


Sepals  and  petals  5.  Stamens  10  ; anthers  all  perfect,  opening  in  terminal 
pores  or  short  slits,  or  some  minute  and  empty.  Leaves  abruptly 

pinnate 81.  Cassia. 

Sepals  and  petals  5.  Stamens  3 with  perfect  anthers  opening  in  longi- 
tudinal slits,  2 small  staminodia.  Leaves  unequally  pinnate  . . . .82.  Petalostyles. 

Sepals  and  petals  4 or  5.  Stamens  2,  opening  in  terminal  pores.  Leaves 
unequally  pinnate  or  with  sessile,  digitate  leaflets 83.  Labichea. 

Tribe  XIII.  Sauhinieae.  -Leaves  simple  or  of  2 leaflets  or  2-lobcd.  Stamens  10  or  fewer. 

Calyx-lobes  or  sepals  valvate 84.  Bauhinia. 

Tribe  XIV.  Amperstiere. — Leaves  simply  pinnate,  occasionally  2-foliolate.  Calyx-lobes 


free  to  the  disk,  or  perianth  reduced  to  scales  or  obsolete.  Petals  5 or  fewer  or  none. 

Bracteoles  present  at  flowering,  opposite,  valvate,  enclosing  the  bud  until 
expansion.  Posterior  petal  larger,  clawed,  the  rest  minute  or  none. 

Perfect  stamens  7,  slightly  coherent  at  the  base 85.  Aizklia. 


384 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


Tribe  XV.  Cynometrex. — Leaves  abruptly  pinnule.  Calyx-lobes  free  to  the  disk.  Petals 
none,  1 or  5.  Ovules  1 to  4. 

Calyx-lobes  or  sepals  imbricate,  4.  Petals  5.  Stamens  10,  regular,  with 

small  anthers.  Leaflets  1 or  2 pairs.  Pod  semiorbicular,  turgid  . . .86.  Cynometra. 

Tribe  XVI.  D im  orphan  dr  eac. — Leaves  bipinnate.  Flowers  small,  subregular.  ■ Calyx 
campanulate,  5-fid.  Petals  5. 

Stamens  twice  as  many  as  petals.  Petals  slightly  imbricate 87.  Erythrophlceum. 


Suborder  III.  MIMOSEyE. 

Flowers  regular,  usually  5-merous  (4  to  6).  Sepals  usually  connate  in  a 
5-toothed  or  lobed  calyx.  Petals  as  many  as  sepals,  free  or  connate,  hypogynous 
or  subperigynous,  valvate  in  {estivation.  Stamens  as  many  or  twice  as  many  as 
petals  or  indefinite,  free  or  monadelphous  ; anthers  minute,  dehiscing  longitudi- 
nally. Seeds  elliptical  or  roundish,  compressed.  Albumen  none  or  sparing. 
Radicle  short,  straight. — Shrubs  or  trees,  rarely  herbaceous.  Leaves  bipinnate. 
Flowers  small,  sessile,  or  shortly  pedicellate,  capitate  or  spicate. 

Tribe  XVII.  Adenanthereae. — Calyx  valvate.  Stamens  10  (rarely  5).  Anthers  with  a 


deciduous  apical  gland. 

Anthers  tipped  with  a gland. 

Pod  large,  coriaceous  or  woody,  the  sutures  forming  a persistent  replum, 

the  valves  falling  away  in  1-seeded  articles.  Tall  woody  climbers  . . 88.  Entada. 

Pod  linear,  2-valved.  Seeds  thick.  Flowers  pedicellate.  Trees  . . .89.  Adenanthera. 

Anthers  without  any  gland.  Pod  short,  flat,  falcate  or  oblique.  Lower 
flowers  of  the  spike  often  with  long,  linear,  coloured  staminodia.  Herbs 
or  undershrubs 90.  Neptunia. 


Tribe  XVIII.  ESumimosere.  —Calyx  valvate  or  setaceous  and  rudimentary.  Stamens  5 or 
10  (4  to  8).  Anthers  glandular ; pollen  granular. 

Flowers  capitate,  valves  of  pod  separating  from  the  persistent  narrower 

suture 91.  ‘Mimosa. 

Tribe  XIX.  Acaciere.  - Calyx  valvate.  Stamens  indefinite,  free  or  consolidated  at  base  only 
with  disk  ; pollen-grains  cohering  in  masses. 

Stamens,  at  least  in  the  hermaphrodite  flowers,  all  free 92.  Acacia. 

Tribe  XX.  Xngeae. — Calyx  valvate.  Stamens  indefinite.  Filaments  united  more  or  less  in 
a tube.  Pollen-grains  cohering  in  masses. 

Stamens  monadelphous. 

Pod  flat  and  thin,  straight  or  scarcely  falcate 93.  Albizzia. 

Pod  curved  or  twisted,  2-valved,  and  often  reddish  or  pulpy  inside,  or 

separating  into  indehiscent  articles 94.  Pithecolobium. 

Differing  only  from  Pithecolobium  in  its  carpels 95.  Archidendron. 


1.  BRACHYSEMA,  R.  Br. 

(Standard  of  flower  short.) 

(Leptosema,  Benth.;  Kaleniczenkia,  Turcz.;  Burgesia,  F.  v.  M.) 

Calyx-lobes  nearly  of  equal  length,  the  2 upper  ones  often  united  higher  up. 
Standard  shorter  and  narrower  than  the  wings,  usually  recurved  ; wings  narrow ; 
keel  usually  broader  and  longer  than  the  wings,  incurved.  Stamens  free. 
Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate,  with  several  ovules ; style  filiform,  with  a small 
terminal  stigma.  Pod  ovoid  or  elongated,  turgid,  the  valves  usually  coriaceous. — 
Shrubs  or  undershrubs.  Leaves  opposite  or  alternate  and  simple,  or  all  reduced 
to  small  scales.  Flowers  red,  or  rarely  yellow-green,  or  almost  black,  terminal 
or  axillary,  solitary  or  several  together,  or  crowded  on  short  radical  scapes,  the 
pedicels  usually  recurved  so  that  the  keel  is  turned  uppermost.  Bracteoles  none. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.— Benth. 


Bvachysema.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSrE. 


835 


Sect.  Iieptosema. — Stems  leafless , except  small  scales.  No  inner  disk  round  the  ovary. 

Stems  winged,  bearing  the  flowers  at  their  notch-like  nodes.  Keel  scarcely 
exceeding  the  calyx  or  shorter.  Pod  ovoid.  Flowers  solitary.  Bracts 
minute  or  none.  Pod  more  than  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx. 

Wings  of  the  stem  2 or  3 lines  broad  on  each  side,  striate.  Calyx  and  pod 

hairy 1.  B.  oxylobioides. 

Wings  of  the  stem  not  1 line  broad  on  each  side.  Calyx  almost  and  pod 
quite  glabrous 2.  B.  unifloruin. 

1.  B.  oxylobioides  (Oxylobium-like),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  9.  Stems 
apparently  several  from  the  same  stock,  diffuse  or  suberect,  1ft.  or  more  long., 
flat,  with  coriaceous  striate  wings  decending  from  the  rather  distant  nodes,  and 
about  2 or  rarely  8 lines  broad,  pubescent  when  young  but  soon  glabrous. 
Pedicels  short,  recurved,  solitary  at  the  upper  nodes  or  2 or  3 together 
in  a short  raceme.  Calyx  pubescent  or  villous,  about  4 lines  long,  deeply  lobed, 
the  2 upper  segments  united  to  the  middle.  Standard  shorter  than  the  calyx, 
the  lamina  oblong,  concave,  reflexed  ; wings  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx  ; keel 
rather  longer  and  broader.  Ovary  sessile,  very  villous,  with  about  20  crowded 
ovules;  style  rather  short.  Pod  ovoid,  inflated,  acuminate,  f to  lin.  long, 
hirsute  with  long  spreading  hairs.  Seeds  as  in  B.  aphyllum. — Leptosema 
oxylobioides,  F.  v.  M.  Rep.  Burdek.  Fxped.  8. 

Hab.:  Shoalwater  Bay,  R.  Brown;  Repulse  Bay,  A.  Cunningham;  Port  Sinclair,  Fitzalan  ; 
Newcastle  Range,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

There  are  also  specimens  in  the  Hookerian  Herbarium,  marked  Victoria  River,  Bynoe ; but 
there  may  be  possibly  some  mistake.  The  specific  name  is  unfortunately  chosen,  as  there  is  no 
leafless  species  of  Oxylobiurn  known,  and  the  flowers  are  very  unlike. — Benth. 

2.  B.  uniflorum  (one-flowered),  E.  Br.;  Benth.  Flora  Austr.  ii.  12.  Habit  of 
B.  oxylobioides,  but  the  wings  of  the  stem  very  narrow,  the  whole  breadth  of  the 
2 wings  rarely  exceeding  2 lines,  and  scarcely  striate.  Flowers  solitary  at  the 
nodes,  on  reflexed  pedicels  of  3 to  6 lines,  rather  smaller  than  in  B.  oxylobioides, 
but  otherwise  similar.  Calyx  only  very  slightly  silky  pubescent.  Ovary  sessile, 
slightly  villous.  Pod  ovoid,  inflated,  nearly  lin.  long,  quite  glabrous.  Seeds, 
according  to  R.  Brown’s  notes,  about  15. — Benth.,  l.c. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Br. 

2.  OXYLOBIUM,  Andr. 

(From  oxys  sharp,  and  lobos  a pod  ; pods  sharp-pointed.) 

(Callistachys,  Vent.;  Podolobium,  R.  Br.) 

Calyx-lobes  nearly  of  equal  length,  the  2 upper  ones  usually  broader  and  united 
higher  up.  Petals  clawed.  Standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  emarginate,  longer 
than  the  lower  petals  ; wings  oblong ; keel  broader  than  the  wings  and  about  the 
same  length,  straight  or  slightly  curved,  obtuse.  Stamens  free.  Ovary  sessile  or 
stipitate,  with  several  (4  to  above  30)  ovules,  on  straight  filiform  funicles ; style 
incurved,  filiform  or  thickened  towards  the  base,  with  a small  terminal  stigma. 
Pod  sessile  or  stalked,  ovoid  or  oblong,  turgid,  continuous  inside  or  rarely  with  a 
cellular  tissue  forming  irregular  transverse  half-dissepiments,  or  slightly  lining 
the  cavity  ; valves  usually  coriaceous.  Seeds  with  or  without  a strophiole. — 
Shrubs  or  rarely  undershrubs.  Leaves  on  very  short  petioles,  more  or  less 
distinctly  verticillate  or  opposite,  occasionally  scattered  or  rarely  all  alternate, 
simple,  entire  or  rarely  with  pungent  lobes.  Stipules  setaceous,  sometimes 
minute  or  none.  Flowers  yellow,  or  the  keel  and  base  of  the  standard,  or  rarely 
entirely,  purple-red,  in  terminal  or  axillary  racemes,  either  loose  or  contracted 
into  corymbs  or  whorl-like  clusters.  Bracts  and  hracteoles  very  deciduous. 
Staminal  disk  usually  very  short.  Ovary  very  villous,  except  in  0.  staurophyllum. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  differs  from  Chorizema  chiefly  in  habit  and  in  the 
proportions  of  the  lower  petals  ; from  Gastrolobiinn  only  in  the  number  of  ovules,  4 or  more,  not 
2 only. — Benth. 


336  XLIII.  LEGUMINOS-dL  [ Oxylobium . 

Series  I.  Callistachys. — Leaves  mostly  irregularly  verticillate.  Inflorescence  terminal, 
very  dense.  Ovules  about  8.  Strophiole  none  or  minute. 

Eacemes  short,  corymbose.  Pod  opening  to  the  base.  Stipules  incon- 
spicuous. Pod  smooth  inside 1.0.  ellipticum. 

Series  II.  Xiaxiflorae. — Shrubs  or  procumbent  or  trailing  undershrubs.  Leaves  mostly 
opposite.  Flowers  in  loose  racemes,  or  few,  axillary.  Calyx  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent.  Ovules 
usually  8.  Strophiole  none. 

Stems  diffuse,  procumbent  or  trailing  Leaves  obovate,  oval,  oblong  or 

lanceolate,  obtuse  or  mucronulate 2.  0.  scandens. 

Series  III.  Podolobiese. — Leaves  mostly  opposite.  Flowers  in  loose  or  slender,  axillary 
or  terminal  racemes.  Calyx  nearly  glabrous.  Ovules  4 or  very  rarely  6.  Seeds  (where  known)  not 


strophiolate. 

Leaves  pungent-pointed,  entire  or  lobed.  Eacemes  mostly  axillary. 

Leaves  lanceolate,  entire,  rounded  or  truncate  at  the  base 3.  0.  aciculiferum. 

Leaves  cuneate  at  the  base,  usually  toothed  or  with  divaricate,  pungent 
lobes. 

Leaves  ovate  or  lanceolate,  toothed  or  shortly  lobed 4.  O.  trilobatum. 

Leaves  deeply  3-lobed,  the  lateral  lobes  lanceolate  and  divaricate  . . . 5.  O.  staurophyllum. 


Callistachys  linaricefolia,  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  117,  is  not  recognisable  from  the  very  short 
diagnosis  given,  but  is  most  probably  the  narrow-leaved  variety  of  0.  ellipticum. 

1.  O.  ellipticum  (leaves  elliptic),  R.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hurt.  Kew  ed.  2,  iii.  10; 
Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  16.  An  erect  shrub,  low  and  compact  in  mountain  situa- 
tions ; tall,  often  straggling,  sometimes  above  10ft.  high  when  luxuriant,  the 
branches  silky-pubescent  or  tomentose.  Leaves  mostly  in  irregular  whorls  of  3,  from 
oval-oblong  or  elliptical,  and  under  lin.  long,  to  oblong-linear,  or  lanceolate,  and  2 or 
3in.  long,  mucronate,  the  margins  recurved  or  revolute,  coriaceous,  glabrous  and 
reticulate  above,  silky-pubescent  or  villous  underneath.  Stipules  quite  incon- 
spicuous. Racemes  densely  corymbose,  terminal  or  in  the  upper  axils.  Pedicels 
1 to  4 lines  long.  Bracteoles  linear,  deciduous.  Calyx  softly  villous,  3 lines 
long  or  rather  more  ; lobes  as  long  as  the  tube,  acuminate,  the  upper  ones  united 
much  higher  up.  Standard  much  longer  than  the  calyx  ; wings  and  keel  shorter. 
Ovary  nearly  sessile,  with  8 to  10  ovules.  Pod  4 to  6 lines  long,  acuminate,  very 
villous,  opening  to  the  base,  glabrous  inside.  Seeds  without  any  strophiole. — 
DC.  Prod.  ii.  104  ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  81  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  3249  ; Gompholobium 
ellipticum,  Labill.  PI.  Nov.  Holl.  i.  106,  t.  135  ; Callistachys  elliptica,  Vent.  Jard. 
Malm,  under  n.  115  ; Chorizema  ellipticum,  F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  39;  Pleurandra 
(?)  reticulata,  Hook.  Journ.  Bot.  i.  245;  Oxylobium  argenteum , Kunze,  in  Linnasa, 
xx.  61  ; 0.  Pultenea,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1947,  not  of  DC. 

Hab.:  Southern  parts  near  the  border  of  N.  S.  Wales. 

Var . angustifolium.  Leaves  long  and  narrow.  I find  no  other  character;  the  distance  of  the 
bracteoles  from  the  calyx  is  very  variable. — O.  arborescens,  E.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew  ed.  2,  iii. 
10 ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  104 ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  163 ; Bot.  Eeg.  t.  392 ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  2442  ; Hook.  f.  FI. 
Tasm.  i.  81 ; O.  pultenece,  Paxt.  Mag.  ix.  149,  with  a fig.,  not  of  DC.;  0.  angustifolium,  A.  Cunn. 
Herb.,  erroneously  referred  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  70,  to  0.  obtusifolium,  Sweet,  a species  which 
I had  then  mistaken. — Bentli.  Hab  : Southern  parts  near  border  of  N.S.W. 

2.  O.  scandens  (climbing),  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  70;  and  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  20.  A shrub  or  undershrub  with  weak  procumbent  or  half  climbing  branches, 
pubescent  when  young.  Leaves  mostly  opposite,  from  obovate  or  ovate-elliptical 
to  ovate- lanceolate  or  narrow-oblong,  obtuse  or  mucronulate,  i\  to  2in.  long  or 
rarely  more,  the  margins  flat,  narrowed  at  the  base,  reticulate,  glabrous  when  full 
grown.  Racemes  terminal  or  in  the  upper  axils,  loose,  with  few  yellow  flowers. 
Pedicels  sometimes  as  long  as  the  calyx,  with  two  small  lanceolate-subulate 
bracteoles  at  a distance  from  the  calyx.  Calyx  under  3 lines  long,  slightly 
pubescent  with  appressed  hairs,  the  lobes  broad,  acute,  about  as  long  as  the  tube, 
and  nearly  equal.  Standard  about  5 lines  diameter  ; wings  shorter,  obovate- 
oblong ; keel  rather  smaller,  the  petals  scarcely  cohering.  Ovary  stipitate,  with 
about  8 ovules.  Pod  very  shortly  stipitate,  about  Jin.  long,  somewhat  curved, 


Oxylobium.  J 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


837 


acuminate,  turgid,  the  valves  transversely  veined,  the  cellular  tissue  very 
scanty  or  scarcely  any. — Chorizema  scandens,  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  253  ; 
F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  40  ; Podolobium  scandens,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  103  ; Daviesia 
umbellata,  and  D.  humifusa,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.;  Podolobium  humifusum,  G.  Don,  Gen. 
Syst.  ii.  116  ; Mirbelia  (? ) Baxteri , Lindl.  Bot.  Reg.  t.  1434 ; Chorizema 
Baxteri,  Grab,  in  Edinb.  New  Phil.  Journ.  1830. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  Bidivill ; Moreton  Bay,  W.  Hill;  common  about  Brisbane,  flowering  from 
July  to  December. 

Var.  obovatum.  Leaves  all  or  almost  all  broadly  obovate  or  orbicular.  Podolobium  obovatum, 
A.  Gray,  Bot.  Amer.  Expl.  Exped.  i.  379. — Hunter  River,  R.  Brown  and  others.  I had  long 
considered  this  as  a distinct  species,  and  had  described  it  from  the  Paris  Herbarium  under  the 
name  of  0.  diffusum,  but  having  now  seen  a considerable  number  of  specimens  from  various 
sources,  both  in  flower  and  fruit,  I find  that  it  only  differs  from  0.  scandens  in  the  breadth  of  the 
leaves,  and  in  this  respect  I have  seen  several  intermediate  specimens. — Benth. 

3.  O.  aciculiferum  (needle-like  point  of  leaf),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  25. 
A tall  slender  shrub  ; branches  pubescent.  Leaves  lanceolate,  with  a fine 
pungent  point,  about  lin.  long,  rounded  or  truncate  at  the  base,  quite  entire, 
coriaceous,  glabrous  and  shining  above,  with  transverse  reticulate  veins,  minutely 
pubescent  and  at  length  glabrous  underneath.  Stipules  long  and  bristle-like, 
Racemes  slender,  axillary  or  terminating  short  leafy  branches,  the  flowers  few 
and  distant.  Calyx  slightly  silky-pubescent,  about  2 lines  long.  Petals  fully 
twice  as  long.  Ovary  stipitate,  with  4 ovules.  Pod  not  seen. — Podolobium 
aciculiferum,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  75. 

Hab.:  Not  uncommon  south  of  Brisbane. 

4.  O.  trilobatum  (3-lobed),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  25.  A shrub  of  several 
feet,  sometimes  almost  glabrous,  more  frequently  with  pubescent  branches. 
Leaves  mostly  opposite,  from  broadly  ovate  to  lanceolate,  1 to  2in.  long,  with 
pungent  points  and  bordered  by  a few  distant  pungent  teeth  or  lobes,  of  which  1 or 
2 on  each  side  near  the  base  are  usually  larger  than  the  others,  coriaceous,  glabrous, 
shining  and  reticulate  above,  pale  and  sometimes  minutely  pubescent  underneath. 
Flowers  yellow,  in  loose  axillary  or  terminal  racemes,  often  exceeding  the  leaves. 
Calyx  slightly  pubescent,  about  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  shorter  than  the  tube,  the 

2 upper  ones  united  nearly  to  the  top.  Petals  fully  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx. 
Ovary  stipitate,  silky-pubescent,  with  4 or  rarely  6 ovules.  Pod  stipitate,  oblong, 

3 to  4 lines  long,  straight  or  incurved,  pubescent  and  turgid  as  in  other 
Oxylobiums,  but  much  narrower.  Seeds  not  strophiolate. — Pultencea  ilicifolia, 
Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  320  ; Chorizema  trilobum,  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  253  ; 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  19  ; Podolobium  trilobatum,  R.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew  ed.  2, 
iii.  9 ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  103  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  1477  ; Bot.  Reg.  t.  1333. 

Hab.:  Not  uncommon  south  of  Brisbane. 

5.  O.  Staurophyllum  (cross-leaved),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  26.  A divari- 
cately-branched glabrous  shrub,  closely  resembling  0.  trilobatum,  and  much 
better  deserving  that  name.  Leaves  alternate  or  opposite,  f to  l|in.  long,  with 
pungent  points  and  a cuneate  base,  and  deeply  divided  into  3 lanceolate,  pungent 
lobes,  the  lateral  ones  divaricate  and  sometimes  again  2-lobed,  all  coriaceous, 
shining,  and  strongly  reticulate.  Flowers  yellow,  in  loose  axillary  racemes, 
rarely  exceeding  the  leaves.  Calyx  glabrous,  about  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  shorter 
than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united,  but  not  so  high  as  in  0.  trilobatum. 
Petals  fully  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Ovary  on  a long  stipes,  nearly  glabrous, 
with  4 ovules.  Pod  narrow,  like  that  of  0.  trilobatum,  but  glabrous. — Podolobium 
staurophyllum,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  103  ; Bot.  Reg.  t.  959;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1177  ; 
Paxt.  Mag.  iv.  171,  with  a fig. 

Hab.:  In  a few  southern  parts  of  the  colony. 


338 


XLIII.  LEGUMIN0S2E. 


3.  CHORIZEMA,  Labill. 

(This  name  is  meant  to  express  that  M.  Labillardiere  and  party  were  ready  to 
dance  for  joy  for  having,  just  at  the  time  of  finding  the  first  of  this  genus, 
also  fallen  in  with  fresh  water  of  which  they  were  in  search). 

(Orthotropis,  Benth.) 

Calyx-lobes  nearly  of  equal  length,  the  2 upper  ones  usually  broader  and  united 
higher  up.  Petals  clawed ; standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  emarginate,  rather 
longer  than  the  wings ; wings  oblong  ; keel  much  shorter  than  the  wings,  straight 
and  obtuse  or  with  an  erect  point,  or  rarely  incurved.  Stamens  free.  Ovary 
sessile  or  stipitate,  with  numerous  or  rarely  8 to  10  ovules  ; style  usually  short, 
incurved  ; stigma  terminal,  frequently  oblique.  Pod  ovoid,  turgid  or  compressed, 
continuous  inside.  Seeds  not  strophiolate. — Shrubs  or  undershrubs.  Leaves  all 
alternate  (except  in  C.  ericifolium),  simple,  entire  or  prickly-toothed.  Stipules 
small,  setaceous,  sometimes  wanting.  Flowers  usually  orange  or  red,  in  terminal 
racemes  or  rarely  axillary.  Pedicels  short,  with  2 small  bracteoles,  usually 
deciduous.  Ovary  villous. 

The  genus  is  exclusively  Australian.  It  differs  from  Oxylobium  chiefly  in  habit  and  in  the 
short  or  acuminate  keel ; the  pod  is  also  usually  less  turgid. — Benth. 

1.  C.  parviflorum  (small  flowered),  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mas.  ii.  71,  and 
FI.  Amtr.  ii.  30.  An  undershrub,  with  a thick  rhizome,  and  numerous 
ascending,  rather  slender,  angular,  striate  stems,  of  about  1ft.,  glabrous  or 
slightly  pubescent.  Leaves  not  numerous,  linear,  and  above  lin.  long,  or  shorter 
and  oblong,  obtuse  or  mucronate,  the  margins  recurved.  Flowers  small,  on  very 
short  pedicels,  in  rather  long,  slender,  terminal  racemes.  Calyx  1^  line  long, 
slightly  pubescent,  the  lobes  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  two  upper  ones  broad, 
truncate  and  united  nearly  to  the  top.  Standard  very  broad,  twice  as  long  as  the 
calyx  ; wings  shorter ; keel  much  shorter,  broad  and  obtuse.  Ovary  very  shortly 
stipitate,  with  about  10  ovules ; style  slightly  incurved,  with  a capitate  stigma. 
Pod  oblique,  often  broader  than  long,  very  turgid,  3 to  4 lines  diameter. — 
C.  pultenea,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  19,  but  not  the  synonyms  adduced. 

Hab.:  Keppel  Bay.  R.Broicn;  E.  coast,  A.  Cunningham;  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill,  Leichhardt; 
Stradbroke  Island,  Fraser ; S.  tributaries  of  Burnett  River  and  Brisbane  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. 
Flowering  from  June  to  November. 

4.  MIRBELIA,  Sm. 

(After  C.  F.  B.  Mirbel.) 

(Dichosema,  Benth.;  Oxycladium,  F.  v.  M.) 

Calyx-lobes  nearly  of  equal  length,  the  two  upper  ones  often  broader  and 
united  higher  up.  Petals  clawed ; standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  emarginate 
or  entire,  longer  than  the  lower  petals ; wings  oblong  ; keel  broader  than  the 
wings,  and  shorter  or  rarely  of  the  same  length.  Stamens  free.  Ovary  sessile 
or  stipitate  with  2 or  several  ovules  ; style  usually  short,  incurved,  with  a 
terminal  capitate  stigma.  Pod  ovoid  or  oblong,  turgid,  divided  longitudinally 
into  2 cells  by  a false  dissepiment  projecting  into  the  cavity  from  the  lower 
suture  and  overlapped  by  or  connate  with  the  projecting  placentas.  Seeds 
without  any  strophiole.- — Shrubs  with  the  habit  nearly  of  Oxylobium  or  of 
Chorizema.  Leaves  opposite  verticillate  or  alternate,  simple  entire  or  prickly- 
toothed.  Stipules  small,  setaceous  or  none.  Flowers  yellow,  purple-red  or  blue, 
solitary  or  clustered  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves,  or  in  axillary  or  terminal  racemes. 
Bracts  and  bracteoles  small  or  none.  Ovary  glabrous  or  villous.  Endocarp  of 
the  pod  separating  from  the  epicarp  in  some  species,  but  not  in  all. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  is  very  nearly  allied  to  Oxylobium,  Gastrolobium,  and 
Chorizema,  differing  chiefly  in  the  remarkable  2-celled  pod,  the  false  dissepiment  being  already 
more  or  less  apparent  in  the  ovary  at  the  time  of  flowering. — Benth. 


Mirbelia,]  XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E.  339 

Leaves  linear-oblong  or  narrow-linear,  the  margins  recurved  or  revolute,  entire. 

Ovules  2. 

Leaves  oblong-linear,  with  recurved  margins,  mostly  verticillate  ....  1.  M.  reticulata. 

Leaves  narrow-linear,  with  revolute  margins,  all  alternate 2.  3/.  aotoides. 

Ovules  8 to  12.  Leaves  narrow-linear,  with  revolute  margins. 

Leaves  pungent.  Calyx-teeth  very  short,  the  upper  lip  broad  and 

truncate 3.  3/.  pungent. 

Leaves  obtuse.  Calyx-lobes  acute,  as  long  as  the  tube.  Ovules  about  12. 

Pod  broadly  ovoid 4.  M.  speciosa. 

Branches  leafless,  spinescent  at  the  end.  Ovules  2 ? Pod  ovoid  or  almost 

globular,  with  prominent  sutures 5.  3/.  oxyclada. 


1.  M.  reticulata  (netted),  8m.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  511,  and  in  Trans.  Linn. 
Soc.  ix.  265  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  35.  A low  shrub  with  slender  but  rigid 
angular  branches  quite  glabrous  or  very  minutely  pubescent.  Leaves  mostly 
verticillate  in  threes,  oblong-linear  with  short  pungent  points,  £ to  fin.  long,  the 
margins  recurved,  glabrous,  shining  above  with  raised  transverse  reticulations, 
occasionally  bordered  by  small  tooth-like  glands.  Flowers  small,  bluish-purple, 
shortly  pedicellate  in  axillary  clusters  or  short  terminal  corymbose  racemes. 
Calyx  minutely  pubescent,  about  li  line  long,  the  teeth  much  shorter  than  the 
tube,  the  two  upper  ones  broad  truncate  and  united  nearly  to  the  top.  Standard 
about  4 lines  long,  slightly  emarginate  ; wings  nearly  as  long  ; keel  very  short, 
obtuse.  Ovary  shortly  stipitate,  glabrous,  with  2 ovules.  Pod  ovoid,  acute, 
rarely  above  2 lines  long. — Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  119;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  114  ; Bot. 
Mag.  t.  1211  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1371  ; Pultencea  rubicefolia,  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t. 
351  ; Mirbelia  rubia folia,  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  126  ; M.  anrjusti folia,  Grab,  in 
Edinb.  N.  Phil.  Journ.  1838  (from  the  descr.) 

Hab..  Several  localities  in  south  Queensland. 

2.  1VI.  aotoides  (Aotus-like),  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Phil.  Inst.  Viet.  iii.  53,  and 
Fragm.  iv.  11  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  35.  A rigid  shrub  with  divaricate  terete 
pubescent  branches.  Leaves  mostly  alternate,  narrow-linear,  obtuse  or  with  a 
small  recurved  or  straight  almost  pungent  point,  the  margins  closely  revolute, 
rarely  above  -Jin.  long,  glabrous  or  pubescent  when  young,  and  often  silky  under- 
neath. Flowers  (yellow  ?)  nearly  sessile,  axillary  and  almost  solitary  or  in  short 
terminal  corymbs.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long,  pubescent  with  minute  appressed 
hairs,  the  teeth  very  short,  the  upper  ones  truncate  and  united.  Standard  very 
broad,  not  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx,  the  claw  short  ; wings  nearly  as  long, 
narrow ; keel  rather  shorter,  obtuse.  Ovary  sessile,  glabrous,  with  2 ovules.  Pod 
broadly  ovoid,  very  obtuse,  shortly  exceeding  the  calyx,  separating  into  2 closed 
hemicarpels,  the  endocarp  remaining  attached  to  the  epicarp.  Seeds  ovoid. 

Hab.:  Burnett  ranges,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

3.  ]VE.  pungens  (sharp-pointed),  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  126 ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  35.  A small  shrub  or  undershrub,  with  ascending  stems, 
often  under  1ft.  high,  the  branches  rather  slender,  pubescent.  Leaves  alternate, 
narrow-linear,  with  pungent  points  and  closely  revolute  margins,  under  £in.  long, 
glabrous.  Flowers  (bluish-purple  ?)  clustered  in  the  upper  axils  on  very  short 
pedicels.  Calyx  slightly  pubescent,  rarely  exceeding  2 lines  and  usually  shorter, 
the  lobes  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  in  a truncate  or  shortly 
2-lobed  upper  lip.  Standard  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx ; keel  shorter  than  the 
wings  but  exceeding  the  calyx,  obtuse  or  with  a short  erect  point.  Ovary 
glabrous  or  slightly  hirsute,  with  6 to  10  ovules.  Pod  ovoid,  about  3 lines  long, 
but  not  seen  in  a perfect  state. — Chorizema  Baueri,  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus. 
ii.  71. 


Hab.:  Southern  Queensland. 


340 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[Mirbelia. 


4.  m.  speciosa  (showy),  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  115  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
36.  An  erect  shrub  of  2 to  3ft.,  with  numerous  virgate  angulaf  branches, 
slightly  hoary-pubescent  or  glabrous.  Leaves  scattered  or  verticillate  in  threes, 
narrow-linear,  obtuse  with  a small  straight  sometimes  almost  pungent  point,  ^ to 
fin.  long,  the  margins  closely  revolute,  glabrous,  scarcely  reticulate.  Flowers 
bluish-purple,  almost  sessile  in  the  upper  axils,  the  upper  ones  forming  a terminal 
interrupted  spike  leafy  at  the  base.  Calyx  fully  3 lines  long,  hoary-pubescent, 
the  lobes  acute,  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  to  the  middle. 
Standard  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx,  emarginate ; wings  nearly  as  long  ; keel 
very  short,  obtuse.  Ovary  sessile,  glabrous,  with  about  12  ovules.  Pod  thickly 
ovoid,  about  4 or  5 lines  long. — Bot.  Reg.  1841,  t.  53;  Reichb.  Icon.  Exot.  t. 
191. 

Hab.:  Southern  Queensland. 

The  figure  of  M.Jtoribunda,  Paxt.  Mag.  viii.  103,  gives  much  more  the  idea  of  this  plant  than 
of  the  true  western  M.  floribunda. 

5.  IVE.  oxyclada  (sharp-pointed  branchlets),  F.  v.  M.  Fratjm..  iv.  12  ; Benth. 
FI.  Anstr.  ii.  3 L A rigid  leafless  shrub,  resembling  M.  daviesioides,  but  more 
slender,  the  branchlets  usually  spinescent.  Leaves  replaced  by  minute  scales. 
Flowers  unknown.  Fruiting  pedicels  short,  solitary  or  in  pairs  along  the 
branches.  Pod  shortly  stipitate,  ovoid,  turgid,  but  with  prominent  sutures  and 
acuminate  with  the  rigid  persistent  base  of  the  style,  2 to  8 lines  long,  imperfectly 
divided  into  2 cells  by  an  incomplete  dissepiment,  the  sutures  persisting  as  a 
replum  after  the  valves  have  fallen.  Seed  1 in  each  cell,  not  strophiolate. — 
Jaeksonia  viminalis,  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  75;  Oxycladium 
semiseptatum,  F.  v.  M.  in  Hook.  Kew  Journ.  ix.  20,  and  Fragm.  i.  168. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  in  F.  v.  Mueller’s  Cens.  Austr.  Plants,  probably  northern. 


5.  ISOTROPIS,  Benth. 

(Equally  turned,  perhaps  alluding  to  the  curved  parts  of  flowers.) 

Calyx  deeply  lobed,  the  2 upper  lobes  united  nearly  to  the  top.  Petals  clawed* 
Standard  orbicular,  emarginate,  longer  than  the  wings  ; wings  obovate,  some- 
what falcate  ; keel  incurved,  nearly  as  long  as  the  wings.  Stamens  free.  Ovary 
sessile,  with  numerous  ovules ; style  incurved,  filiform,  with  a minute  terminal 
stigma.  Pod  oblong  linear  or  lanceolate,  acute,  more  or  less  turgid.  Seeds  not 
strophiolate. — Herbs  or  undershrubs,  with  diffuse  or  ascending  stems.  Leaves 
alternate,  simple  or  unifoliolate,  herbaceous.  Stipules  linear-falcate  or  minute. 
Flowers  solitary,  on  axillary  peduncles,  or  forming  a loose  terminal  raceme. 
Ovary  villous. 

The  genus  is  exclusively  Australian.  It  is  closely  allied  to  Oxylobium  and  Chorizema,  differing 
chiefly  in  habit,  in  the  deeper-cleft  calyx,  and  in  the  longer  pod. — Benth. 

Leaves  of  1 leaflet,  articulate  on  the  petiole. 

Calyx  pubescent,  3 lines  long.  Racemes  mostly  leaf-opposed,  leafless.  Stem- 
leaves  lanceolate,  acute  1.  I.  filicaulis. 

Calyx  pubescent.  2 lines  long.  Pedicels  short,  axillary  or  leaf-opposed. 

Stem-leaves  linear,  flat 2.  7.  parviflora. 

1.  I.  filicaulis  (stems  thread-like),  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  71,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  40.  Stems  erect  or  ascending  from  a perennial  base,  often  above 
lft.  high,  slender,  branched  and  terete,  glabrous  or  pubescent  with  appressed 
hairs.  Leaves  consisting  of  a single  leaflet,  articulate  on  a rather  short  petiole, 
linear  or  lanceolate,  acute,  1 to  nearly  2in.  long,  or  rarely  small  and  linear- 
cuneate.  Flowers  in  loose  slender  racemes,  mostly  leaf-opposed.  Pedicels 
rather  longer  than  the  calyx.  Bracteoles  minute  or  none.  Calyx  nearly 


Isotropis.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSvE. 


841 


3 lines  long,  pubescent,  the  lobes  lanceolate.  Standard  very  broad,  shortly 
exceeding  the  calyx,  slightly  streaked  ; wings  and  keel  nearly  as  long.  Ovary 
nearly  sessile,  with  about  20  ovules.  Pod  linear,  pubescent,  often  exceeding 
lin. — ChorizCma  LeichharcLtii , F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  20. 

Hab.:  Shoalwater  Bay,  R.  Brou  n ; Port  Curtis,  M‘ Gillivray ; Wide  Bay , lliilwill,  Leichhardt. 

2.  I.  parviflora  (small-flowered),  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  71,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  40.  Very  near  I.  Jilicaulis,  and  Mr.  Bentham  says  perhaps  a 
variety  of  that  species.  Stems  slender,  decumbent,  branched,  pubescent.  Leaves 
of  a single  leaflet,  articulate  on  a rather  short  petiole.  Flowers  smaller  than  in 
I.  jilicaulis  in  all  the  specimens  seen,  on  short  axillary  or  leaf  opposed  pedicels. 
Calyx  pubescent,  about  2 lines  long.  Petals  of  I.  jilicaulis,  but  smaller.  Pod 
linear,  pubescent,  about  lin.  long. — Benth.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Br.  (Benth.) 


6.  GOMPHOLOBIUM,  Sm. 

(From  gomphos  a wedge,  and  lobos  a pod.) 

Calyx  deeply  cleft,  the  tube  very  short,  the  lobes  lanceolate,  valvate,  the  2 upper 
ones  sometimes  more  falcate  or  slightly  cohering,  but  not  connate.  Petals  very 
shortly  clawed.  Standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  longer  than  the  lower  petals  ; 
wings  oblong,  more  or  less  falcate ; keel  usually  broader  than  the  wings,  obtuse  ; 
Stamens  free.  Ovary  usually  shortly  stipitate  or  nearly  sessile  ; style  incurved, 
filiform  or  slightly  thickened  from  the  middle  upwards  ; ovules  several,  usually  8 or 
more,  rarely  4 or  6,  the  funicles  long  and  thick,  all  curved  or  folded  downwards.  Pod 
broadly  ovoid  or  nearly  globular,  usually  oblique,  inflated.  Seeds  small,  without 
any  strophiole. — Shrubs  or  rarely  undershrubs,  glabrous  pubescent  or  hirsute 
with  spreading  hairs.  Leaves  simple  or  more  frequently  compound,  the  leaflets 
usually  narrow,  digitate  or  pinnate  with  the  terminal  leaflet  sessile  between  the 
last  pair.  Stipules  small,  lanceolate  or  subulate,  or  none.  Flowers  yellow  or 
red,  terminal  or  rarely  in  the  upper  axils,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together  or  in  short 
racemes.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  small,  sometimes  minute  or  none.  Ovary 
glabrous  in  all  except  G.  Baxteri  (a  West  Australia  species),  where  the  style  is  also 
exceptionally  thickened  at  the  base. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  is  readily  distinguished  from  all  except  Burtonia  by  the 
calyx  and  pod,  and  is  separated  from  that  genus  by  the  more  numerous  ovules,  with  the  regularly- 
packed  funicles  all  turned  downwards.  The  ovules  in  both  genera  are  usually  scarcely  larger 
than  the  breadth  of  the  funicle. — Benth. 

Pedicels  longer  than  the  calyx,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together  in  a very  loose 
raceme.  Plant  glabrous.  Leaflets  3,  digitate,  1 to  2in.  long,  the  common 
petiole  usually  very  short.  Standard  above  lin.  diameter.  Keel  densely 


fringed 1.  G.  latifolium. 

Pedicels  very  short  or  not  longer  than  the  calyx,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together  in 
dense  leafy  corymbs  or  heads.  Leaflets  3,  digitate,  above  Jin.  long, 
usually  flat  or  recurved.  Plant  quite  glabrous.  Calyx  4 or  5 lines. 

Standard  6 or  7 lines  long 2.  G.  virgatum. 

Leaves  pinnate.  Leaflets  more  than  3. 

Shrubs,  usually  diffuse,  not  viscid.  Calyx  glabrous. 

Leaflets  cuneate.  Common  petiole  elongated 3.  G.  nitidum. 

Leaflets  narrow-linear.  Common  petiple  elongated 4.  G.  pinnatum. 


(The  pinnate-leaved  species  with  only  2 ovules  to  the  ovary  are  now  transferred  to 
Burtonia. — Benth.) 

1.  G.  latifolium  (broad-leaved),  Sin.  in  Ann.  Bat.  i.  505,  and  ii.  519,  and 
in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  249,  not  of  Labill.',  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  42.  A glabrous 
shrub,  with  erect  virgate  branches.  Leaflets  3,  on  a very  short  common  petiole, 
linear,  linear-lanceolate  or  linear-cuneate,  acute  or  truncate  and  mucronate,  1 to 
2in.  long,  the  margins  flat  or  slightly  recurved,  the  veins  fine  and  almost  longi- 


842 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Gompholobium. 


tudinal ; stipules  inconspicuous.  Flowers  large,  yellow.  Peduncles  (or  leafless 
flowering  branches)  solitary  in  the  upper  axils,  nearly  as  long  as  or  longer  than 
the  leaves,  with  a pair  of  small  3-foliolate  bracts  about  the  middle,  or  sometimes 
growing  out  into  leafy  branches  with  a terminal  flower.  Calyx  h to  fin.  long. 
Standard  broad,  usually  above  lin.  long;  lower  petals  nearly  as  long;  keel 
incurved,  very  obtuse,  densely  fringed  on  the  inner  edge  with  short  white  woolly 
hairs.  Ovary  with  about  20  ovules.  Pod  ovoid,  J to  fin.  long. — G.  fimbriatum,  Sm. 
Exot.  Bot.  t.  58  ; G.  psoraleafolium , Salisb.  Parad.  Loud.  t.  G ; G.  barbigerum, 
DC.  Prod.  ii.  105  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  4171  ; Paxt.  Mag.  xiv.  221,  with  a fig. 

Hab.:  Many  localities  in  southern  Queensland. 

Misled  by  Labillardi&re,  most  modern  botanists  have  transferred  the  name  of  G.  latifolium  to 
G.  Hueglii.-— Benth. 

2.  Cr.  virgatum  (twiggy),  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  105  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  45.  An  erect  glabrous  shrub.  Leaflets  3,  the  common  petiole  very  short 
or  scarcely  any,  linear,  the  margins  always  recurved,  although  rarely  absolutely 
revolute,  £ to  fin.  long  or  rarely  none.  Flowers  yellow,  terminal,  solitary 
or  2 or  3 together,  the  pedicels  rarely  so  long  as  the  calyx.  Calyx  4 to  5 lines 
long.  Standard  6 to  7 lines  ; keel  shorter,  not  fringed.  Ovary  with  about  8 
ovules.  Pod  about  as  long  as  the  calyx.— Reichb.  Icon.  Exot.  t.  97. 

Hab.:  Sandy  Cape,  Ii.  Brown  ; islands  of  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

3.  G.  nitidum  (shining),  Soland.  in  Herb.  Banks. ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  48. 
A much-branched,  glabrous  shrub.  Leaves  pinnate,  with  a common  petiole  of 
about  ^in. ; leaflets  usually  about  7 to  11,  oblong-cuneate  or  almost  obovate, 
emarginate,  4 to  6 lines  long,  dark  and  shining  above,  glaucous  underneath. 
Flowers  terminal,  solitary,  rather  large,  on  very  short  pedicels.  Calyx  glabrous, 
fully  5 lines  long,  the  lobes  of  a thickish  consistence  and  not  separated  so  low 
down  as  in  other  species.  Petals  shortly  exceeding  the  calyx,  the  keel  not  ciliate. 
Ovules  (from  R.  Brown’s  notes)  4.  Pod  sessile,  shorter  than  the  calyx. — -DC. 
Prod.  ii.  106. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander,  R.  Brown  (Herb.  Banks  and  R.  Br.) — Benth. 

4.  Cr.  pinnatum  (pinnate),  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  251;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  48.  A glabrous  undershrub,  with  slender  but  rigid  ascending  or  erect 
stems  of  1ft.  or  rather  more,  simple  or  little  branched,  and  usually  flexuouse. 
Leaves  pinnate  ; leaflets  few  in  the  lower  leaves,  on  a short  common  petiole, 
often  above  30  in  the  upper  ones,  with  a common  petiole  of  above  lin.,  linear  or 
almost  subulate,  4 to  8 lines  long,  mucronate  or  acute,  the  margins  revolute. 
Flowers  few,  in  short,  loose,  terminal  racemes,  or  rarely  solitary,  the  pedicels 
longer  than  the  calyx.  Calyx  about  3 lines  long.  Standard  very  broad,  rather 
longer  than  the  calyx,  and  the  lower  petals  nearly  as  long.  Ovary  usually  with  8 
ovules.  Pod  ovoid-globular,  rather  longer  than  the  calyx. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  10G. 

Hab.:  Sandy  Cape,  R.  Brown ; Port  Curtis,  M'Gillivray  ; Wide  Bay,  Bid  will ; Brisbane  River 
and  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller. 


7.  BURTONIA,  R.  Br. 

(After  D.  Burton.) 

Calyx  deeply  cleft,  the  lobes  longer  than  the  tube,  lanceolate,  valvate,  the  2 
upper  ones  often  broader  or  more  obtuse,  but  not  connate.  Petals  very  shortly 
clawed ; standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  longer  than  the  lower  petals  ; wings 
oblong  or  obovate,  more  or  less  falcate ; keel  usually  broader  than  the  wings, 
obtuse.  Stamens  free.  Ovary  sessile  or  shortly  stipitate ; style  incurved,  more 
or  less  dilated  towards  the  base ; ovules  2,  the  funicles  long  and  thick,  one  curved 
or  folded  upwards,  the  other  downwards.  Pod  broadly  ovoid  or  nearly  globular, 
usually  oblique,  inflated.  Seeds  small,  without  any  strophiole. — Shrubs  or  rarely 


Burtonia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


843 


undershrubs,  glabrous  or  hirsute  with  spreading  hairs.  Leaves  simple  or 
compound,  digitate,  or  pinnate  with  the  terminal  leaflet  sessile  between  the  last 
pair.  Stipules  minute  or  none.  Flowers  yellow,  orange-red,  or  bluish-purple, 
solitary  in  the  axils  of  the  upper  leaves  or  forming  terminal  racemes.  Bracts 
small ; bracteoles  also  small,  usually  below  the  middle  of  the  pedicel.  Ovary 
glabrous  or  villous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  is  closely  allied  to  Gompholobium,  with  the  same 
diversity  of  foliage,  valvate  calyx,  etc.;  differing  chiefly  in  the  ovules,  always  2 only,  with  the 
funicles  very  long  and  thick,  as  in  Gompholobium,  but  one  always  curved  or  folded  upwards,  the 
other  downwards,  not  all  downwards  as  in  that  genus.  The  style  is  also  much  thicker  at  the 
base. — Benth. 

Leaves  pinnate.  Racemes  terminal.  Plant  glabrous.  Racemes  1 to  3-flowered. 


Leaflets  few,  subulate 1.  if.  subulata. 

Leaflets  numerous,  very  small,  obovate  or  obcordate 2.  B.foliolosa, 


1.  B.  subulata  (awl-shaped),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  50.  An  erect,  glabrous 
shrub,  of  1 to  2ft.  with  slender,  rigid  branches.  Leaves  pinnate,  with  a common 
petiole  of  3 or  4 lines ; leaflets  5,  7 or  rarely  9,  linear-subulate,  with  revolute 
margins,  mucronulate,  f to  fin.  long.  Flowers  few,  in  very  short,  terminal, 
almost  corymbose  racemes,  or  often  quite  solitary  ; pedicels  usually  longer  than 
the  calyx.  Calyx  glabrous,  about  4 lines  long.  Petals  nearly  equal  in  length, 
slightly  exceeding  the  calyx.  Style  more  slender  than  in  most  Burtonias,  yet 
somewhat  dilated  at  the  base.  Pod  compressed  globular,  scarcely  exceeding  the 
calyx. — Gompholobium  subulatum,  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  72  ; G.  steno- 
phyllum,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  30. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  It.  Br.  (Benth.  l.e.) 

2.  2.  foliolosa  (leaflets  numerous),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  50.  An  elegant 
little  shrub,  quite  glabrous  and  somewhat  glaucous,  with  slender  terete  branches. 
Leaves  pinnate,  the  common  petiole  rarely  above  fin.  long.  Leaflets  11  to  21  or 
even  more,  obovate  or  obcordate,  very  obtuse,  1 to  If  line  long.  Flowers  small,  few 
together,  in  loose,  terminal,  almost  corymbose  racemes,  the  pedicels  rather  longer 
than  the  calyx.  Calyx  nearly  2 lines  long,  less  deeply  divided  than  in  most  other 
species,  although  the  lobes  are  longer  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  more 
obtuse.  Standard  at  least  half  as  long  again  as  the  calyx ; wings  and  keel 
shorter.  Ovary  sessile,  glabrous  ; style  slightly  flattened  towards  the  base.  Pod 
not  seen. — Gompholobium  foliolosum,  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  848. 

Hab.:  Sandy  forests,  Warrego  River,  Mitchell ; Dogwood  Creek,  Leichhardt. 


8.  JACKSONIA,  R.  Br. 

(After  G.  Jackson.) 

(Piptomeris,  Turcz.) 

Calyx  deeply  cleft,  the  tube  usually  very  short,  lobes  valvate,  the  2 upper  ones 
broader,  sometimes  falcate,  rarely  connate.  Petals  shorter  than  the  calyx  or  rarely 
exceeding  it,  nearly  equal  in  length,  the  claws  very  short ; standard  orbicular  or 
reniform,  usually  emarginate ; wings  oblong ; keel  nearly  straight,  obtuse, 
broader  than  the  wings.  Stamens  free.  Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate ; style  subulate, 
incurved,  with  a minute  terminal  stigma;  ovules  2 (except  in  J . piptomeris,  of  West 
Australia),  attached  by  short  funicles.  Pod  sessile  or  stipitate,  ovate  or  oblong,  flat 
or  turgid.  Seeds  usually  solitary,  without  any  strophiole. — Shrubs  or  undershrubs, 
rigid  and  leafless,  or  rarely  with  a very  few  1-foliolate  leaves;  branches  rigid, 
terete,  angular  or  winged,  the  branchlets  often  phyllodineous  or  leaf-like,  flat  or 
terete  or  angular,  very  much  branched  and  spinescent.  Leaves  replaced  by  very 
minute  scales  at  the  nodes.  Flowers  yellow  or  with  an  admixture  of  purple, 

Part  II,  c 


344 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Jacksonia. 


either  in  terminal  or  lateral  racemes  or  spikes,  or  scattered  along  the  branches. 
Bracts  small  and  scale-like.  Bracteoles  small,  deciduous  or  persistent.  Ovary 
villous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  is  allied  to  Gompholobium  and  Burtonia  in  the  deeply- 
lobed  valvate  calyx,  but  very  different  in  habit,  in  the  short  slender  funieles  of  the  ovules,  in  the 
pod,  <fec.  In  the  two  species  (J.  vernicosa  and  J.  thesioides)  where  the  calyx-tube  is  longer  in 
proportion  to  the  lobes,  it  is  lined,  at  least  halfway  up,  by  the  staminal  disk. — Benth. 

Series  I.  Phyllodineae. — Phyllodineous  branchlets  flat,  rigidly  coriaceous,  toothed  or  lobed, 


often  prickly. 

Flowers  in  racemes  or  spikes  terminating  the  phyllodia 1 . J.  dilatata. 

Series  II.  Ramosissimse. — Subphyllodineous  branchlets  crowded,  linear,  angular-striate, 
with  projecting  tooth  like  nodes. 

Flowers  in  dense  terminal  spikes.  Calyx  very  hirsute 2.  J.  odontoclada. 

Flowers  in  short  terminal  racemes.  Calyx  sparingly  silky-pubescent  . . . 3 . J.  ramosissima. 


Series  III.  Scoparise. — Flowering  branches  virgate  or  rush-like  without  pungent  branchlets. 
Barren  stems  or  branches  usually  similar,  although  occasionally,  in  the  loicer  part  of  the  stem, 


much-branched  flexuose  or  pungent. 

Calyx-tube  half  as  long  as  the  lobes  or  longer,  turbinate,  10-nerved. 

Calyx  4 lines  long,  the  tube  half  as  long  as  the  lobes 4 . J.  vernicosa. 

Slightly  spinescent,  branches  slender,  sulcate.  Flowers  dark-purple  . . 5.  J.  rhadinoclona. 

Calyx  2 lines  long,  the  tube  nearly  as  long  as  the  lobes 6.  J.  thesioides. 

Calyx-tube  very  short,  without  prominent  nerves.  Calyx-lobes  deciduous. 

Buds  not  angular. 

Branches  flat  or  angular.  Pod  on  a long  stipes  about  §in.  long. 

Flowers  racemose.  Calyx  2£  to  3 lines  long 7.  J.  scoparia. 

Plant  procumbent.  Branches  thin.  Flowers  in  pairs.  Calyx  silvery-silky.  8.  J.  Stackhousii. 

Branches  angular.  Calyx  2-bracteolate.  Flower  purplish  or  bluish,  the 

upper  lip  deeply  divided 9 . J.  purpurascens. 


1.  J.  dilatata  (expanded),  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  74,  and  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  54.  An  erect  shrub,  silky-pubescent  or  tomentose,  or  at  length  more  or  less 
glabrous,  more  or  less  rust-coloured  under  the  inflorescence.  Branchlets  leaf- 
like, flat,  lanceolate,  2 to  4in.  long,  the  nodes  forming  tooth-like  notches  on  the 
edges  with  an  arched  nerve  from  the  midrib  to  each  node.  Flowers  sessile  in 
oblong  spikes  or  heads  at  the  ends  of  some  of  the  leaf-like  branchlets,  which 
taper  more  to  the  end  than  the  barren  ones.  Bracts  ovate,  scale-like,  1 to 
line  long,  bracteoles  often  longer  and  lanceolate,  all  very  deciduous.  Calyx 
villous,  about  3 lines  long.  Standard  about  as  long  as  the  calyx,  lower  petals 
shorter.  Ovary  very  shortly  stipitate.  Pod  ovate,  silky,  shorter  than  the  calyx, 
containing  one  black  seed. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown ; towards  Lake  Nash,  M.  Costello. 

2.  J.  odontoclada  (the  branches  appearing  toothed),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  55.  Pubescent  or  villous,  with  short  loose  hairs  and  densely 
branched.  Barren  branchlets  short,  crowded,  linear,  angular  or  somewhat 
flattened,  the  minute  scales  confluent,  with  tooth-like  projections  at  the  nodes. 
Flowers  sessile,  or  nearly  so,  in  dense  terminal  spikes  or  heads.  Bracteoles 
lanceolate,  adnate  to  the  base  of  the  calyx,  and  longer  than  its  tube.  Calyx 
densely  hirsute,  4 to  nearly  5 lines  long,  the  tube  under  1 line,  the  2 upper  lobes 
often  connate  to  the  middle.  Petals  shorter  than  the  calyx ; keel  shortly 
acuminate,  broader  than  the  wings  and  longer  than  the  standard.  Ovary  sessile. 
Young  pod  densely  villous,  turgid,  but  not  seen  ripe. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

3.  J.  ramosissima  (very  branchy),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  258  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  56.  Shrub  scarcely  more  than  3ft.  high,  glabrous,  very  densely 
branched.  Barren  branchlets  crowded,  linear,  angular  or  somewhat  flattened, 
the  small  scales  at  the  nodes  often  rigid  and  spreading.  Flowers  in  short  terminal 


Jacksonia .] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


345 


racemes,  on  pedicels  scarcely  exceeding  the  subtending  scales.  Braeteoles  ovate, 
adnate  to  the  base  of  the  calyx  and  often  as  long  as  its  tube.  Calyx  sparingly 
pubescent,  about  4 lines  long,  membranous,  the  2 upper  lobes  broader,  falcate 
and  often  cohering  above  the  middle.  Petals  shorter  than  the  calyx.  Ovary 
sessile.  Pod  ovoid-oblong,  acuminate,  hirsute,  shorter  than  the  calyx. 

Hab.:  Sutton  River,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Belyando  River,  Mitchell;  Bowen,  E.  Fitzalan ; Cape 
River,  R.  Daintree. 

4.  J.  vernicosa  (varnished),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  58. 
Shrub  8ft.  high,  branches  very  numerous,  slender,  striate,  but  scarcely  angled, 
usually  glabrous,  the  young  shoots  apparently  somewhat  glutinous.  Flowers  not 
numerous,  in  terminal  racemes,  on  very  short  pedicels.  Braeteoles  minute, 
adnate  to  the  base  of  the  calyx.  Calyx  4 lines  long,  slightly  pubescent,  the 
lobes  not  twice  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  broader  and  falcate,  the 
tube  campanulate,  10-ribbed,  lined  nearly  to  the  top  by  the  staminal  disk. 
Petals  shorter  than  the  calyx.  Ovary  sessile,  short,  tapering  into' the  style.  Pod 
sessile,  villous,  turgid,  shorter  than  the  calyx,  but  exposed,  owing  to  the  calyx- 
lobes  being  reflexed  or  deciduous. 

Hub.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

5.  J.  rhadinoclona  (shoots  slender),  F.  v.  M.  Cens.  Austr.  PI.  Shrub, 
often  slightly  spinescent,  the  branches  slender,  sulcate,  nearly  terete,  minutely 
silky.  Flowers  dark-purple,  spicate.  Braeteoles  persistent.  Calyx  short,  silky- 
hairy,  persistent.  Petals  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx,  wings  shorter.  Style 
short,  glabrous,  deciduous.  Pod  ovate,  turgid,  silky-hairy,  shortly  stipitate. — 
Moore’s  FI.  N.S.W.  182. 

I have  never  seen  specimens  of  this  plant,  and  Baron  Mueller  only  briefly  referred  to  it  in 
Fragm.  x.  37. 

Hab.:  Thomson  River,  Birch  (F.  v.  M.,  l.c.) 

6.  J.  thesioides  (Thesium-like),  A.  Gunn.;  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii. 
74,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  59.  A tall  shrub,  with  the  habit  of  J.  scoparia.  Branches 
numerous,  elongated,  not  spinescent,  with  2 or  3 very  prominent  angles,  minutely 
silky-hoary  or  quite  glabrous.  Flowers  yellow,  smaller  than  in  J.  scoparia,  sessile 
or  shortly  pedicellate  in  terminal  one-sided  racemes.  Braeteoles  minute,  just 
below  the  calyx.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long,  minutely  silky-hoary,  the  lobes  a little 
longer  than  the  tube,  which  is  10-nerved  and  lined  at  least  half-way  up  by  the 
staminal  disk.  Standard  and  wings  about  as  long  as  the  calyx  ; keel  a little 
shorter.  Ovary  sessile,  tapering  into  a short  style.  Pod  oblong,  somewhat 
incurved,  turgid,  2 to  2\  lines  long. 

Hab.:  Prince  of  Wales’  Island,  Thursday  Island,  <fcc.  ; Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander, 
A.  Cunningham,  W.  Hill;  Cape  Flinders,  A.  Cunningham;  Lizard  Island,  MlGillivray. 
Flowering  in  June. 

7.  J.  scoparia  (broom-like),  R.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Few  ed.  2,  iii.  13  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  59.  Dogwood ; “ Mamboo,”  Bundaberg,  Keys.  A tall  shrub 
or  small  tree,  usually  entirely  leafless,  but  occasionally  the  young  plants  or  the 
base  of  the  branches  have  a few  petiolate,  oblong  or  oval-elliptical,  herbaceous 
leaves,  f to  2in.  long.  Branches  numerous,  erect  or  pendulous,  elongated,  not 
spinescent,  angular,  glabrous  or  minutely  hoary-pubescent.  Flowers  yellow,  in 
one-sided  racemes,  either  terminal  or  from  the  upper  nodes.  Pedicels  rarely  as 
long  as  the  calyx,  without  braeteoles.  Calyx  membranous,  minutely  silky-hoary, 
2i  to  3 lines  long,  divided  nearly  to  the  base.  Standard  rather  longer  than  the 
calyx,  lower  petals  rather  shorter.  Ovary  stipitate.  Pod  flat,  oblong,  usually  4 
to  6 lines  long,  on  a stipes  of  1 to  2 lines,  tipped  by  the  persistent  style. — DC. 


346 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Jacksonia. 


Prod.  ii.  107;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  427;  <7.  macrocarpa,  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien. 
Mus.  ii.  74  (the  filaments  erroneously  described  as  toothed) ; Viminaria  lateriflora, 
Link,  Enum.  Hort.  Berol.  i.  403  ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  107  (from  the  short  description 
given). 

Hab.:  Sandy  Cape,  Broadsound,  It.  Brown;  Port  Curtis,  M'Gillivray ; Burnett  River,  F.  v. 
Mueller  ; Barcoo  River,  Mitchell ; Brisbane  River  and  Moreton  Bay  islands,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Pine 
River,  Fitzalan ; Rockhampton,  Dallachy.  Flowering  in  September. 

Wood  yellowish,  brown  towards  the  centre. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  113. 

In  some  localities  these  shrubs  are  much  infested  by  Raestelia  polita. 

8.  J,  Stackhousii  (after  Captain  Stackhouse,  R.N.),  F.  v.  M.  I'roc.  L.S. 
N.S.W.  vi.  791.  Plant  dwarf,  procumbent  or  ascendent,  not  pungent.  Branches 
very  thin,  finely  or  scantily  silky,  gradually  glabrescent,  slightly  furrowed. 
Flowers  in  pairs  along  the  upper  part  of  the  branches.  Calyx  silvery-silky, 
slightly  longer  than  broad,  very  angular  from  the  prominent  edges  of  the  lobes  ; 
upper  lip  divided  only  to  about  one-tliird  of  its  length  into  2 deltoid  teeth ; lower 
lip  slit  to  the  base  into  3 ovate-lanceolate  segments  ; tube  suddenly  narrowed, 
three  times  shorter  than  the  segments.  Petals  equally  yellow,  all  of  about  the 
same  length.  Ovary  sessile.  Pod  shorter  than  the  calyx,  almost  ovate,  com- 
pressed, silky  outside,  nearly  smooth  inside.  Seeds  1 or  2,  grey,  minutely 
blackish-dotted.  In  habit  and  ramification  similar  to  J.  angulata,  a West 
Australian  species ; in  the  deeply  divided  upper  lip  of  calyx  it  approaches  J. 
odontoclada. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  in  F.  v.  M.  Census  of  Austr.  PI. 

9.  J.  purpurascens  (purplish),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  161.  A shrub  of  about 
4ft.,  very  much  branched.  Branches  angular,  hoary-silky,  at  length  almost 
glabrescent.  Flowers  on  short  pedicels,  almost  racemose.  Bracts  minute, 
lanceolate-subulate.  Calyx  bibracteolate,  slightly  silky  outside,  the  lobes  scarcely 
over  1 line  long.  Petals  purplish  or  bluish ; standard  about  2 lines,  3-lobed, 
wings  obtuse,  keel  petals  somewhat  acute.  Ovary  2-ovulate.  Pod  2 lines  long. 
Seeds  slightly  kidney-shaped,  about  1J  line  long,  smooth,  brown,  exalbuminous. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallachy  (F.  v.  M.) 


9.  SPHvEROLOBIUM,  Sm. 

(From  sphaira,  a sphere,  and  lulus,  a pod — form  of  pod.) 

(Roea,  Huey.) 

Calyx-lobes  imbricate,  the  two  upper  ones  larger,  falcate,  united  into  an  upper 
lip.  Petals  with  short  claws  ; standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  emarginate  ; wings 
rather  shorter,  oblong,  usually  falcate ; keel  longer  or  rather  shorter  than  the 
wings,  straight  or  curved.  Stamens  free.  Ovary  stipitate  ; style  much  incurved, 
subulate  or  dilated  at  the  base,  usually  with  a longitudinal  membrane  or  a ring  of 
hairs  under  the  stigma ; ovules  2,  with  short  thick  funicles.  Pod  small,  stipitate, 
oblique,  globular  or  compressed.  Seeds  1 or  2,  not  stropliiolate. — Glabrous 
shrubs  or  undershrubs,  with  rush-like  stems,  often  leafless.  Leaves,  when 
present,  narrow,  entire,  alternate  or  irregularly  opposite  or  whorled.  Flowers 
yellow  or  red,  in  terminal  racemes  or  in  lateral  racemes  or  clusters.  Filaments 
of  the  outer  stamens  often  somewhat  dilated  below  the  middle.  Ovary  always 
glabrous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  is  readily  known  by  its  habit,  by  the  small  stipitate 
nearly  globular  pod,  and,  in  the  Queensland  and  many  other  species,  by  the  appendages  of  the 
style. — Benth.  (in  part). 

1.  S.  vimineum  (twiggy),  Sm.  in  Ann.  But.  i.  509,  and  in  'Frans.  Linn.  Sue. 
ix.  261  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  65.  Stems  ascending  or  erect,  from  a few  inches  to 
above  2ft.  high,  with  slender,  terete,  wiry  branches,  all  leafless  or  the  barren 


Spharolobium.] 


XLI1I.  LEGUMINOSdE. 


347 


branches  bearing  a few  scattered  linear  or  narrow-lanceolate  leaves,  rarely  exceed- 
ing Jin.  in  length.  Flowers  numerous,  usually  clustered  two  or  three  together 
along  the  smaller  branches,  forming  dense  or  interrupted  terminal  racemes. 
Pedicels  very  short.  Calyx  l\  to  nearly  2 lines  long,  the  tube  about  as  long  as 
the  upper  lip.  Petals  about  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx  ; keel  somewhat  incurved, 
very  obtuse,  as  long  as  the  wings.  Style  much  curved  from  near  the  base,  with 
a long  narrow  wing  along  the  inner  edge.  Pod  scarcely  2 lines  diameter. — Bot. 
Mag.  t.  969  ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  108  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1753 ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i. 
84  ; S.  minus,  Labill.  PI.  Nov.  Holl.  i.  108,  t.  138. 

Hab.:  Swampy  land,  south  Queensland. 


10.  VIMINARIA,  Sm. 

(Branches  broom-like,  twiggy.) 

Calyx-teeth  short,  equal.  Petals  on  rather  long  claws.  Standard- orbicular  ; 
wings  oblong,  shorter  than  the  standard  ; keel  slightly  curved,  about  as  long  as 
the  wings.  Stamens  free.  Ovary  nearly  sessile  ; style  filiform,  with  a small 
terminal  stigma ; ovules  2,  with  short  funicles.  Pod  sessile,  ovoid-oblong, 
usually  indehiscent,  the  pericarp  thickly  membranous.  Seed  usually  solitary, 
filling  the  cavity,  with  a very  small  annular  strophiole.- — Shrub,  with  rush-like 
stems.  Leaves  alternate,  mostly  reduced  to  a long  filiform  petiole.  Flowers 
small,  in  terminal  racemes. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species,  with  the  flowers  nearly  of  a Daviesia,  but  very  distinct 
in  the  fruit,  which  is  almost  that  of  a Melilotus. — Benth. 

1.  V.  denudata  (leaves  wanting),  Sm.  Exot.  Bot.  51,  t.  27,  and  in  Ann.  Bot. 
i.  507,  and  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  261  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  68.  A glabrous  shrub, 
sometimes  erect,  attaining  10  to  20ft.,  with  long,  wiry,  pendulous  branches,  more 
rarely  low  and  decumbent.  Leaves  reduced  to  filiform  petioles,  of  from  3 to  8 or 
even  9in.,  the  lower  ones  or  those  of  luxuriant  branches  occasionally  bearing  at 
the  extremity  1 to  3 oval-oblong  or  lanceolate,  herbaceous  leaflets,  of  J to  ljin. 
Flowers  small,  orange-yellow,  in  long  terminal  Kacemes.  Pedicels  rarely  as  long 
as  the  calyx,  in  the  axils  of  small  scale- like  bracts,  without  bracteoles.  Calyx 
nearly  2 lines  long,  including  the  short,  turbinate,  disk-bearing  base.  Petals 
about  twice  as  long.  Pod  2 to  3 lines  long.  Albumen  rather  thicker  than  in  the 
other  Podalyriece  where  it  has  been  observed. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  107  ; Bot.  Mag.  t. 
1190;  Meissn.  in  PL  Preiss.  i.  57  ; Paxt.  Mag.  xiv.  123,  with  a fig.;  Sophora 
juncea,  Schrad.  Sert.  Hannov.  t.  3 ; Pultencea  juncea,  Willd.  Spec.  ii.  506 ; 
Daviesia  denudata,  Vent.  Choix,  t.  6 ; D.  juncea,  Pers.  Syn.  i.  454,  not  of  Sm. 

Hab.:  Fraser’s  Island,  Miss  Lovell. 

11.  DAVIESIA,  Sm. 

(After  the  Rev.  H.  Davies,  F.L.S.,  a Welsh  botanist.) 

Calyx-teeth  short,  either  all  equal  or  the  2 upper  ones  united  in  a truncate 
upper  lip,  the  disk-bearing  base  either  shortly  turbinate  or  elongated  and  stalk- 
like. Petals  on  a slender  claw  ; standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  emarginate ; 
wings  falcate-oblong  or  obovate,  not  longer  than  the  standard  ; keel  more  or  less 
incurved,  obtuse  or  almost  acute,  not  exceeding  the  wings.  Stamens  free,  the 
5 outer  filaments  often  flattened  and  sometimes  cohering  in  a tube,  although 
readily  separable.  Ovary  shortly  stipitate,  tapering  into  a subulate  style,  with  a 
small  terminal  stigma  ; ovules  2,  with  short  funicles.  Pod  nearly  sessile  or 
stipitate,  more  or  less  flattened,  acute,  triangular,  the  upper  suture  nearly  straight, 
the  dorsal  or  lower  suture  much  curved,  forming  almost  a right  angle.  Seeds 
solitary  or  rarely  2,  with  a rather  large  strophiole. — Shrubs  or  undershrubs. 
Leaves  alternate,  simple,  entire,  coriaceous  or  rigid,  either  flat  and  horizontal  or 


348 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


[Daviesia. 


vertical,  or  terete  and  spinescent,  sometimes  decurrent  along  the  stem,  or  reduced 
to  short  prickles  or  teeth,  or  entirely  wanting.  Stipules  none  or  very  minute. 
Flowers  usually  small,  yellow,  orange,  or  red,  in  axillary  or  lateral  racemes  or 
pedunculate  umbels,  occasionally  reduced  to  short  clusters  or  rarely  solitary  or 
terminal.  Bracts  at  the  base  of  the  racemes  small,  dry  and  scale-like,  those  under 
the  pedicels  similar  or  a few  of  them,  in  a few  species,  much  enlarged  over  the 
fruit.  Bracteoles  none.  Ovary  glabrous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  The  short  calyx-teeth  usually  distinguish  it  from  almost 
all  Podalyriea  except  Viminaria  and  Latrobea  (a  West  Australian  genus),  but  cannot  be 
absolutely  relied  upon ; the  pod,  however,  is  quite  peculiar.  It  is  also  in  most  cases  readily 
known  by  the  habit,  and  is  indeed  so  natural  that,  numerous  as  are  the  species,  I have  been 
unable  to  distribute  them  into  distinct  sections.  The  following  series  are  founded  chiefly  on 
the  foliage  and  on  the  degree  of  development  of  the  inflorescence.  Some  species  of  this  genus, 
when  not  in  flower,  have  been  occasionally  mistaken  for  phyllodineous  Acacias.—  Benth. 

Series  I.  Umbellatae. — Flowers  umbellate,  at  the  ends  of  the  peduncles.  Bracts  all  small 
and  not  enlarging.  Leaves  flat,  horizontal,  usually  small,  rigid,  with  pungent  points. 

(D.  umbellulata  and  D.  corymbosa,  amongst  the  Bacemosce.  have  the  flowers  occasionally 


almost  umbellate.) 

Leaves  broadly  ovate-cordate,  tapering  into  a pungent  point 1.  D.  concinna. 

Leaves  linear,  6 to  12in.  long.  Peduncles  1 to  3 in  the  axils  of  the  leaves  of 

the  upper  branches.  Umbels  bearing  about  5 flowers 2 . D.  Wyattiana. 


Series  II.  Racemosae. — Flowers  racemose,  the  common  rliachis  elongated,  either  flowering 
from  the  base  or  the  pedicels  crowded  towards  the  end.  Bracts  small.  Leaves  flat,  horizontal. 


Leaves  (under  lin.)  linear  or  linear-lanceolate,  pungent,  not  reticulate. 

Racemes  flowering  above  the  middle.  Bracts  very  small 3 . D.  umbellulata. 

Leaves  narrow,  elongated,  the  lower  ones  rarely  ovate-oblong,  not  pungent. 

Branches  slightly  angular.  Flowers  numerous.  Calyx  1 to  1J  line  long. 

Flowering  branches  all  leafy,  never  spinescent 4.  D.  corymbosa. 

Tree.  Leaves  linear-lanceolate,  2 to  4in.  long.  Racemes  numerous.  Calyx- 

teeth  ciliate 5.  D.  arbor ea. 


Series  III.  Fasciculatae. — Flowers  in  axillary  clusters  or  very  short  racemes.  Leaves  flat, 


horizontal,  pungent-pointed . 

Leaves  under  Jin.  long,  oval  or  oval-oblong,  not  reticulate,  straight-pointed. 

Calyx  with  a truncate  upper  lip.  Branches  hirsute 6.  D.  filipes. 

Leaves  under  lin.  long,  cordate-ovate,  lanceolate  or  linear.  Calyx  5-toothed 
Branches  not  spinescent. 

Leaves  cordate  or  ovate,  much  acuminate,  usually  under  Jin.  long. 

Pedicels  filiform 7.  D.  squarrosa. 

Leaves  linear,  with  revolute  margins,  about  lin.  long.  Pedicels  very 

short 9.  D.  acicularis. 

Branches  spinescent.  Leaves  ovate,  lanceolate  or  linear,  pungent-pointed, 

but  scarcely  acuminate 8.  D.  ulicina. 


Series  IV.  Teretifoliae. — Leaves  terete  or  slightly  compressed  or  rarely  vertically  dilated 
towards  the  top,  at  length  articulate  on  the  stem,  usually  short  or  pungent-pointed.  L lowers 
solitary,  clustered,  or  rarely  racemose. 

Leaves  divaricate,  very  pungent.  Upper  calyx-teeth  truncate.  Filaments 

slender.  Bracts  very  small.  Keel  not  much  covered,  obtuse . . . . 10.  D.  genistifolia. 

1.  D.  concinna  (neat),  R.  Br.  Herb.;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  75. 
Branches  elongated,  slender,  slightly  angular-pubescent.  Leaves  broadly  ovate- 
cordate,  tapering  into  a pungent  point,  not  exceeding  Jin.,  almost  veinless  except 
the  midrib.  Flowers  small,  in  umbels  of  8 or  4,  on  a common  peduncle  about  as 
long  as  the  leaves.  Bracts  very  small.  Pedicels  slender,  2 to  4 lines  long.  Calyx 
about  1 line  long.  Petals  and  pod  of  D.  umbellulata,  from  which  the  species 
differs  chiefly  in  the  broad,  less  coriaceous  leaves  and  more  umbellate  inflorescence. 

Hab.:  Rock  Hills,  Pine  Port,  R.  Brown. 

2.  D.  Wyattiana  (after  Dr.  William  Wyatt,  of  South  Australia),  Bail., 
Papers  Gardeners’  Soc.  S.  Austr.  A tall,  erect,  glabrous  shrub  of  from  5 to  10ft., 
branches  acutely  triangular,  the  faces  striated.  Leaves  linear,  6 to  12in.  long,  2 
or  8 lines  broad,  tapering  towards  the  base,  where  the  midrib  is  prominent  on 


Pl.X  III. 


ffvvflitho  Office 

■Brisbane*  0. 


Dcoviesia/  WyaJli cuxcu,  Bail* 


T C Wills 


Dai'iesia .] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


349 


both  sides,  veins  very  oblique,  almost  parallel,  reticulations  forming  oblong 
areoles.  Peduncles  1 to  3 in  the  axils  of  the  upper  branches,  about  8 lines  long, 
each  bearing  an  umbel  of  usually  5 pedicellate  flowers.  Bracts  3 or  4 obtuse 
small  ones  on  the  lower  half  of  the  peduncle  and  an  involucre  of  similar  ones 
close  under  the  pedicels.  Pedicels  about  6 lines  long,  articulate  just  below  the 
calyx.  Calyx  2 lines  long,  teeth  nearly  equal,  slightly  pubescent  inside.  Standard 
flabelliform,  emarginate,  yellow  with  purple  centre,  about  3 lines  wide ; wings 
nearly  as  long  as  standard  ; keel  shorter,  yellowish,  purple  at  the  tip.  Pod  flat, 
about  5 lines  long.  Seeds  usually  solitary,  oblong,  mottled,  with  large 
strophiole. 

Hab.:  Eight-mile  Plains.  In  flower  September 

3.  D.  umbellulata  (umbellulate),  Sw.  in  Ann.  Hot.  i.  507,  and  in 
Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  258;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  75.  A slender  much-branched 
shrub,  glabrous  or  sparingly  pubescent,  the  branches  sulcate.  Leaves  lanceolate 
or  linear-lanceolate,  f to  fin.  long,  rigid  with  a pungent  point,  1 -nerved,  flat,  not 
reticulate.  Racemes  in  some  specimens  shorter  than  the  leaves,  in  others  twice 
as  long,  flowering  from  the  middle  upwards  or  at  the  end  only.  Pedicels  usually 
2 to  3 lines.  Bracts  about  f line  long.  Calyx  about  1 line  long,  the  teeth  short 
and  obtuse,  the  two  upper  ones  broad,  truncate  and  united  nearly  to  the  top. 
Petals  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Pod  about  5 lines  long. — D.  racemulosa,  DC. 
Prod.  ii.  114  (from  the  character  given). 

Hab.:  Peel  Island,  Moreton  Bay,  Fraser,  A.  Cunningham;  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill. 

4.  D.  corymbosa  (flowers  in  corymbs),  Sm.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  507,  and  in 
Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  258  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  76.  A glabrous  shrub  of  2 to  4 
or  5ft.,  the  branches  slightly  angular.  Leaves  usually  lanceolate  or  linear,  rarely 
broader  and  oblong,  with  a short  callous  point  or  rarely  quite  obtuse,  If  to  3in. 
long  or  sometimes  almost  4in.,  rigid,  1 -nerved,  and  when  broad  more  or  less 
reticulate.  Racemes  usually  shorter  than  the  leaves,  and  flowering  from  above 
the  middle  or  from  the  end  only,  with  long  slender  pedicels,  the  bracts  small, 
obovate,  spi’eading  under  the  pedicels,  with  numerous  others  crowded  at  the  base 
of  the  peduncle  without  flowers,  but  occasionally  the  racemes  flower  more 
regularly  from  below  the  middle.  Calyx  about  1 line  long,  the  teeth  short,  the 
2 upper  ones  broad,  truncate,  and  united.  Standard  three  times  as  long  as  the 
calyx;  keel  rather  shorter.  Pod  nearly  fin.  long. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  113;  Andr. 
Bot.  Rep.  t.  611  ; D.  mimosoides,  Bot.  Mag.  t.  1957  ; D.  glauca,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab. 
t.  43  (from  the  figure);  D.  macrophylla,  Endl.  Nov.  Stirp.  Dec.  15  (a  luxuriant 
garden  specimen  with  the  lower  leaves  broad,  above  4in.  long). 

Var.  mimosoides.  Leaves  usually  narrow,  with  more  pinnate  and  less  reticulate  veins. 
Flowers  smaller,  the  racemes  flowering  from  below  the  middle  ; bracts  smaller  and  less  spreading. 
— D.  mimosoides,  B.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew  ed.  2,  iii.  20  ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  114.  D.  virgata,  A.  Cunn. 
in  Bot.  Mag.  t.  3196.  D.  linearis,  Lodd.  Bot  Cab.  t.  1615.  D.  leptophylla,  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don, 
Gen.  Syst.  ii.  125. — This  appears  to  be  the  most  common  form  over  the  whole  range,  from 
Queensland  to  S.  Australia.  The  original  D.  corymbosa  is  probably  limited  to  Port  Jackson  and 
the  Blue  Mountains,  N.S.W.  I).  virgata,  linearis,  and  leptophylla  represent  a remarkably 
narrow-leaved  form,  which  appears,  however,  in  our  numerous  specimens  to  pass  very  gradually 
into  the  common  mimosoides  variety. — Benth.  (in  part). 

Hab.:  Between  Stanthorpe  and  the  border  of  N.  S.  Wales  most  of  the  forms  may  be  met  with ; 
also  a long-leaved  form  has  been  received  from  Mrs.  K.  W.  Garraway,  Palmer  Biver. 


5.  D.  arborea  (a  tree),  IP.  Hill,  in  Cat.  of  Woods  sent  to  Melb.  Inter.  Kxhih. , 
1880.  A medium-sized  tree,  with  a dark  rugged  bark ; branchlets  slender, 
angular.  Leaves  linear-lanceolate,  2 to  4in.  long  and  about  fin.  broad.  The 
apex  glandular  pointed,  1-nerved  and  prominently  reticulate.  Racemes  numerous, 


350 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Daviesia. 


often  2 in  an  axil,  about  lin.  long,  bearing  8 or  9 golden-coloured  flowers  on  long 
slender  pedicels ; bracts  minute ; calyx  about  1 line  long,  with  ciliate  teeth  ; 
petals  with  dark  markings,  the  standard  about  3 lines  long;  pod  small. 

Hab.:  District  of  the  Logan  River. 

In  general  appearance  this  tree  resembles  one  of  the  narrow-leaved  Wattles.  The  above 
specific  name  seems  first  to  have  been  attached  to  it  by  Mr.  Walter  Hill;  it  was  afterwards 
noticed  by  the  late  Rev.  B.  Scortechini.  There  is  little,  however,  except  size,  to  separate  it  from 
D.  corymbosa,  Sm. 

Wood  of  a pinkish  colour,  with  numerous  reddish  longitudinal  streaks,  and  beautifully 
mottled,  fragrance  peculiarly  agreeable;  a strong,  useful  cabinet  wood. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods 
No.  114. 

6.  D.  filipes  (pedicels  thread-like),  Bentli.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  363, 
and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  80.  Branches  slender,  terete,  virgate,  softly  hirsute 
as  well  as  the  leaves.  Leaves  oblong  or  oval-oblong,  shortly  pungent-pointed, 
under  fin.  long,  veinless  except  the  midrib.  Flowers  solitary  or  2 together,  on 
filiform  pedicels  about  as  long  as  the  leaves.  Bracts  very  small.  Calyx  If  to 
If  line  long,  the  turbinate  base  rather  short,  the  teeth  short,  the  2 upper  ones 
broad,  truncate,  and  united.  Standard  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx ; keel  rather 
shorter,  incurved,  obtuse.  Pod  only  seen  young. 

Hab.:  On  the  Maranoa  River,  Mitchell. 

7.  D.  squarrosa  (squarrose),  Sm.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  507,  and  in  Trans. 
Linn.  Soc.  ix.  257  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  80.  A glabrous  or  pubescent  shrub, 
with  slender  terete  or  slightly  angular  branches.  Leaves  numerous,  sessile, 
spreading  or  reflexed,  cordate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  tapering  into  a pungent  point, 
mostly  3 to  4 lines  long,  veinless  except  the  prominent  midrib.  Flowers  small, 
solitary  or  2 together,  on  pedicels  of  2 to  3 lines,  with  a few  minute  bracts  at 
their  base.  Calyx  about  1 line  long,  the  turbinate  base  very  short,  the  teeth 
rather  short,  the  2 upper  ones  broader  and  shortly  united,  but  not  forming  a 
truncate  upper  lip.  Standard  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx  ; keel  rather  shorter, 
much  incurved,  obtuse.  Pod  about  5 lines  long. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  114. 

Var.  villifera.  Branches  and  younger  leaves  pubescent  or  villous. — D.  villifera,  A.  Cunn.; 
Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  76. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  Fraser,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others. 
Flowering  in  September. 

8.  D.  ulicina  (Furze-like),  Sm.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  506,  and  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc. 
ix.  256 ; Benth.  Ft.  Austr.  ii.  81.  A rigid,  bushy  shrub,  attaining  sometimes 
several  feet,  the  branches  more  or  less  angular,  the  smaller  ones  generally  ending 
in  short  thorns,  glabrous  or  hirsute  with  spreading  hairs.  Leaves  from  broadly- 
ovate  to  lanceolate  or  linear,  ending  in  a pungent  point,  usually  under  fin.,  but 
occasionally  attaining  lin.  when  narrow  and  luxuriant,  very  rigid,  veinless, 
except  the  midrib.  Flowers  solitary  or  clustered  or  rarely  in  umbels  of  3 or  4,  on 
a short  common  peduncle.  Bracts  very  small.  Pedicels  short.  Calyx  1 to  If 
line  long,  the  turbinate  base  very  short,  the  2 upper  teeth  rather  broader  than 
the  others,  but  scarcely  united  at  the  base.  Standard  very  broad,  more  than  twice 
as  long  as  the  calyx  ; keel  shorter,  much  incurved,  obtuse.  Pod  4 to  5 lines 
long. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  114  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  44 ; Paxt.  Mag.  iv.  29,  with  a fig.; 
D.  ulicifolia,  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  304  ; I).  umbellulata,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  114  (partly) ; 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  82,  not  of  Sm.;  D.  genistoides,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1552. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay  and  Burnett  River,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Stradbroke  Island,  Bailey. 

Var.  angustifolia.  Glabrous.  Leaves  linear,  but  flat,  not  terete  nor  laterally  compressed, 
as  in  D.  genistifolia,  and  the  calyx  quite  that  of  D.  ulicina.  Hab.:  Southern  parts  of  the  colony. 

9.  D.  acicularis  (needle-like),  Sm.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  506,  and  in  Trans.  Linn. 
Soc.  ix.  255  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  81.  An  erect  shrub,  with  virgate  branches, 
glabrous  or  pubescent.  Leaves  crowded,  linear,  pungent-pointed,  mostly  about 
lin.  long,  the  margins  revolute,  the  midrib  conspicuous  at  the  base  only.  Flowers 


Davie  si  a.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


351 


solitary  or  clustered,  the  pedicels  very  short.  Calyx  \\  to  nearly  2 lines  long, 
the  turbinate  base  very  short,  the  5 teeth  nearly  equal,  lanceolate,  and  scarcely 
shorter  than  the  tube.  Standard  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx  ; keel  shorter,  obtuse. 
Pod  4 to  5 lines  long,  acuminate. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  114  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  2679  ; Lodd. 
Bot.  Cab.  t.  1234  (leaves  much  less  crowded,  but  probably  the  same  species). 

Hab.:  Parts  of  the  colony. 

10.  X).  genistifolia  (broom-leaved),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii. 
75  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  82.  A glabrous  shrub,  with  slender,  slightly  sulcate 
branches.  Leaves  linear-terete  or  very  slightly  laterally  compressed,  divaricate, 
pungent-pointed,  mostly  \ to  lin.  long,  smooth  or  sulcate.  Pedicels  slender,  1| 
to  2 lines  long,  in  clusters  or  exceedingly  short  racemes.  Bracts  small,  obovate. 
Calyx  1£  line  long,  including  the  narrow,  almost  stalk-like,  turbinate  base ; the 
teeth  very  short,  the  2 upper  ones  broad,  truncate,  and  united.  Petals  twice  as 
long  as  the  calyx,  of  nearly  equal  length,  the  keel  obtuse.  Pod  about  4 .lines  long. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  Fraser,  and  many  other  southern  localities. 


12.  AOTUS,  Sm. 

(From  a,  without,  and  ous,  an  ear;  calyx  having  no  bracts  at  its  base.) 

Calyx,  2 upper  lobes  broader  and  more  or  less  united  in  an  upper  lip.  Petals 
rather  long-clawed ; standard  nearly  orbicular,  longer  than  the  lower  petals  ; 
wings  oblong  ; keel  incurved.  Stamens  free,  ovary  sessile  or  stipitate,  with  2 
ovules  on  short  straight  funicles  ; style  filiform,  with  a minute  terminal  stigma. 
Pod  ovate,  flat  or  turgid,  2-valved.  Seed  reniform,  without  any  strophiole  (Ql. 
species). — Shrubs,  with  branches  often  virgate.  Leaves  simple,  scattered  or 
ternately  whorled,  the  margins  recurved  or  revolute.  Stipules  none.  Flowers  in 
axillary  clusters,  often  in  threes,  on  short  pedicels,  or  rarely  in  short  terminal 
racemes.  Bracts  small  and  very  deciduous  ; bracteoles  none.  Ovary  villous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  differs  from  Pultenaa  chiefly  in  the  want  of  stipules  and 
bracteoles,  and  in  most  cases  in  the  want  of  any  strophiole  to  the  seeds.  It  is,  in  most  cases, 
readily  distinguished  from  Dillwynia  by  the  recurved,  not  incurved,  margins  of  the  leaves, 
independently  of  the  seeds. — Benth. 

Leaves  scattered  or  imperfectly  whorled,  narrow,  with  much  revolute  margins. 

Calyx  usually  above  1J  line  long. 

Leaves  linear,  obtuse  or  with  recurved  points.  Keel  purple. 

Calyx  under  2 lines,  the  upper  lobes  falcate  or  truncate,  united  above  the 
middle.  Plant  tomentose,  hoary  or  nearly  glabrous.  Seeds  not 


strophiolate 1 A.  villosa. 

Calyx  nearly  2 lines,  the  lobes  nearly  equal.  Leaves  softly  tomentose  . . 2 .A.  mollis. 

Leaves  mostly  lanceolate  and  almost  acute.  Branches  villous.  Flowers 

large.  Keel  yellow.  Ovary  stipitate 3 A.  lanigera. 


1.  A.  villosa  (hairy),  Sm.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  504,  and  in  Trans.  Lin.  Soc.  ix. 
249  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  90.  A bushy  heath-like  shrub,  the  branches  terete, 
often  long  and  virgate,  usually  densely  tomentose  or  softly  villous,  rarely  hoary 
or  almost  glabrous.  Leaves  narrow-linear  or  rarely  oblong,  obtuse  or  with 
recurved  points,  3 to  6 lines  long,  the  margins  closely  revolute,  glabrous  or 
pubescent  above  when  young,  the  under  surface  pubescent,  but  usually  concealed. 
Flowers  yellow,  with  a purple  or  dark-coloured  keel,  axillary,  solitary  or  in  clusters 
of  2 or  3,  often  forming  long  leafy  spikes  or  racemes  below  the  ends  of  the 
branches.  Pedicels  short,  without  bracts  or  bracteoles.  Calyx  pubescent  or 
villous,  line  long  or  rather  more,  the  lobes  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  2 upper 
ones  broader,  falcate  and  united  to  the  middle.  Standard  twice  as  long  as  the 
calyx,  emarginate ; lower  petals  nearly  as  long,  the  keel  incurved,  very  obtuse. 
Ovary  stipitate.  Pod  2 to  2£  lines  long,  somewhat  turgid.  Seeds  not  strophio- 
late.— Bot.  Mag.  t.  949;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  108;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1353;  Hook.  f. 


352 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Aotus. 


FI.  Tasm.  i.  88 ; Pultencea  villosa,  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  309  ; Pultemea  ericoides, 
Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  85  ; Daviesia  ericoides,  Pers.  Syn.  i.  454  ; Aotus  ferruginea, 
Labill.  PI.  Nov.  Holl.  i.  104,  t.  132  ; Aotus  ericoides,  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  120  ; 
Pultenwa  rosmarinifolia  and  P.  virgata,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.;  Aotus  virgata,  DC.  Prod, 
ii.  108. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Island  and  swampy  places  in  southern  Queensland. 

2.  A.  mollis  (softly  hairy),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  236  and  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  91.  Nearly  allied  to  A.  villosa.  Branches  densely  velvety-tomentose.  Leaves 
linear-oblong,  obtuse,  4 to  8 lines  long,  the  margins  revolute,  softly  pubescent 
above,  densely  rusty -toinentose  underneath.  Flowers  clustered  in  the  axils,  often 
arranged  in  irregular  but  distinct  whorls,  nearly  sessile.  Bracts  about  1 line  long, 
truncate,  very  deciduous.  Calyx  villous,  nearly  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  nearly 
equal.  Petals  not  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx,  the  keel  dark  and  very  much 
incurved.  Ovary  shortly  stipitate.  Pod  rather  larger  than  in  A.  villosa.  Seeds 
not  strophiolate. 

Hab.:  From  the  Mantuan  Downs  to  the  Maranoa,  Mitchell. 

3.  A.  lanigera  (woolly),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mils.  ii.  78,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  92.  A stouter  shrub  than  A.  villosa,  the  branches  tomentose  and 
villous,  with  soft  spreading  hairs.  Leaves  oblong-lanceolate  or  linear,  mostly 
acute,  £ to  |in.  long,  the  margins  revolute,  hairy  when  young,  at  length  glabrous, 
smooth  and  shining  above,  hoary  underneath.  Flowers  axillary,  as  in  A.  villosa, 
but  much  longer,  and  all  yellow.  Bracts  above  1 line  long,  very  deciduous, 
though  not  so  very  early  as  in  A.  villosa.  Calyx  villous,  2^  lines  long,  the  lobes 
acuminate,  the  2 upper  ones  rather  broader  and  slightly  falcate.  Standard  |in. 
long ; lower  petals  rather  shorter.  Ovary  stipitate.  Pod  very  villous,  much 
flattened,  very  obtuse,  above  3 lines  long.  Seeds  not  strophiolate. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  Fraser,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Wide  Bay , Biduill ; 
also  Leichhardt ; and  swampy  parts  of  southern  Queensland. 


13.  PHYLLOTA,  DC. 

(Some  species  having  ear-shaped  leaves.) 

Caiyx,  2 upper  lobes  broader,  and  sometimes  united  into  an  upper  lip.  Petals 
clawed  ; standard  nearly  orbicular,  longer  than  the  lower  petals  ; wings  oblong  ; 
keel  much  incurved.  Stamens  either  all,  or  at  least  the  5 outer  ones,  more  or 
less  adnate  to  the  petals  at  the  base,  and  sometimes  all  united  with  them  in  a 
ring  or  short  tube.  Ovary  sessile,  with  2 ovules  on  short  funicles  ; style  dilated 
or  thickened  at  the  base,  incurved  and  subulate  upwards ; stigma  small,  terminal. 
Pod  ovate,  somewhat  turgid,  2-valved.  Seed  reniform,  without  any  strophiole. — 
Shrubs,  usually  heath-like.  Leaves  scattered,  linear,  with  revolute  margins. 
Stipules  none,  or  very  minute  in  P.  humifusa  (a  New  South  Wales  species). 
Flowers  axillary  or  terminal.  Bracteoles  often  leaf-like,  inserted  under  the  calyx 
and  usually  closely  pressed  to  it.  Ovary  small,  very  villous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  differs  from  Dillwynia,  which  it  resembles  in  habit,  in 
the  revolute,  not  involute,  margins  of  the  leaves,  and  in  the  absence  of  any  strophiole ; from 
Aotus  in  the  presence  of  bracteoles  ; and  from  both,  as  well  as  from  all  other  allied  genera,  in 
the  tendency  to  a union  of  the  filaments  with  the  petals. — Benth. 

1.  P.  phylicoides  (Phylica-like),  Benth, . in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  77,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  95.  An  erect  heath-like  shrub,  of  several  feet,  the  branches  terete, 
glabrous  pubescent  or  hirsute.  Leaves  numerous,  narrow-linear,  mostly  about 
+in.  long,  but  in  some  specimens  nearly  fin.,  in  others  not  above  4 lines,  obtuse 
or  with  callous  usually  recurved  points,  the  margins  revolute,  more  or  less 
tuberculate,  scabrous,  and  sometimes  sprinkled  with  erect  hairs,  rarely  quite 


Phyllota.\ 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS.E. 


853 


smooth  and  glabrous.  Flowers  almost  sessile  in  the  upper  axils,  forming 
terminal  leafy  heads  or  spikes,  or  becoming  lateral  by  the  elongation  of  the 
terminal  shoot.  Bracteoles  leafy,  lanceolate,  acuminate,  longer  than  the  calyx- 
tube,  and  often  exceeding  the  lobes.  Calyx  2+  to  3^  lines  long,  glabrous  or 
villous,  the  lobes  about  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  broad  and  shortly 
united,  the  lowest  rather  longer  than  the  lateral  ones.  Standard  4 to  6 lines 
long ; lower  petals  rather  shorter,  the  keel  broader  than  the  wings,  much 
incurved,  but  obtuse.  Filaments  and  petal-claws  all  united  at  the  base  in  a ring 
or  short  tube.  Ovary  tapering  into  the  style,  which  is  much  dilated  below  the 
middle,  and  quite  glabrous.  Pod  ovate  or  shortly  oblong,  included  in  the  calyx. 
Seeds  without  any  strophiole. — Pultenaa  phylicoides,  P.  aspera,  P.  comosa,  and 
P.  squarrosa,  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  113  ; Phyllota  pilosa,  P.  aspera,  P.  comosa, 
P.  Billardieri,  P.  grandiflora,  P.  squarrosa,  and  P.  Baueri,  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien. 
Mus.  ii.  77. 

Hab.:  Sandy  Cape,  R.  Brown;  Moreton  Island,  M'Gillivray,  F.  v.  Mueller ; and  in  other  parts 
of  southern  Queensland.  Flowering  in  March. 

The  characters  upon  which,  after  De  Candolle,  I had  endeavoured  to  distinguish  several 
species,  entirely  break  down  when  applied  to  the  large  number  of  specimens  I have  now  had 
before  me.  I am  unable  to  distribute  them  even  into  marked  varieties,  much  as  they  differ  in 
the  size  of  the  flowers,  the  erect  spreading  or  recurved  leaves,  &e.  The  supposed  differences  in 
inflorescence  depend  often  on  the  period  of  development. — Benth. 

14.  GASTROLOBIUM,  R.  Br. 

(Pods  of  some  species  inflated.) 

Calyx  5-lobed,  the  2 upper  lobes  usually  broader  and  united  higher  up.  Petals 
clawed.  Standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  emarginate,  longer  than  the  lower 
petals  ; wings  oblong ; keel  broader  than  the  wings  and  usually  shorter.  Stamens 
free.  Ovary  stipitate  or  rarely  sessile,  with  2 ovules  on  straight  and  filiform 
funicles.  Style  incurved,  filiform,  with  a small  terminal  stigma.  Pod  ovoid  or 
nearly  globular,  turgid,  continuous  inside,  the  valves  coriaceous.  Seeds  (where 
known)  strophiolate. — Shrubs.  Leaves  on  very  short  petioles,  more  or  less 
distinctly  verticillate  or  opposite,  or  occasionally  scattered,  simple  and  entire, 
usually  rigid.  Stipules  setaceous,  rarely  wanting.  Flowers  yellow  or  the  keel 
and  base  of  the  standard  purple-red,  in  terminal  or  axillary  racemes,  either  loose 
or  contracted  into  corymbs  or  whorl-like  clusters.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  usually 
very  deciduous,  in  a few  species  the  brown  rigid  bracts  persist  nearly  till  the 
flowers  open.  Staminal  disk  usually  very  short.  Ovary  very  villous. 

With  the  exception  of  the  Queensland  species,  the  genus  is  limited  to  West  Australia.  It  is 
closely  allied  on  the  one  hand  to  the  strophiolate  species  of  Oxylobium,  only  differing  from  them 
in  the  number  of  ovules,  constantly  2,  and  on  the  other  to  Pultencea,  from  which  it  is  dis- 
tinguished by  the  habit,  the  coriaceous  leaves,  the  bracteoles  either  deciduous  or  inconspicuous, 
and  the  more  coriaceous  turgid  pod. — Benth. 

1.  G-.  grandiflorum  (large  flowers),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  17  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  103,  Fragm.  x.  35 ; Bail.  A Gord.  PI.  Rep.  Pois.  Stock,  PI.  13. 
Apparently  a tall  shrub,  the  young  branches  and  inflorescence  softly 
silky-pubescent,  the  full-grown  foliage  nearly  glabrous  and  glaucous.  Leaves 
opposite  or  the  upper  ones  alternate,  from  ovate  to  oblong,  obtuse  or  emarginate, 
1£  to  3in.  long,  flat,  coriaceous.  Racemes  short,  loose,  axillary  and  terminal, 
with  few,  large,  pedicellate  flowers.  Calyx  softly  pubescent,  4 to  5 lines  long, 
the  lobes  much  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  broad,  falcate,  and  united 
nearly  to  the  middle.  Standard  fully  fin.  diameter,  lower  petals  rather  shorter, 
the  keel  much  incurved  and  deeply  coloured.  Ovary  very  hairy,  on  a long 
glabrous  stipes.  Pod  ovate,  acute,  turgid,  3 or  4 lines  long,  stipitate,  villous,  with 
minute  strophiole  to  seed. 

Hab.:  Flinders  and  Cape  Rivers,  Rockingham  Bay,  Port  Denison,  Peak  Downs,  and  many 
other  tropical  inland  localities.  Usually  flowering  about  March. 

The  most  poisonous  to  stock  of  any  in  the  Queensland  Flora. 


854 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS/E. 


15.  PULTENiEA,  Sm. 

(In  honour  of  Dr.  W.  Pulteney,  a botanical  author.) 

(Euchilus,  jR.  Br.;  Spadostyles,  Benth.;  Urodon,  Turcz.) 

Calyx,  2 upper  lobes  more  or  less  united  into  an  upper  lip,  and  sometimes 
much  larger  than  the  lower  ones,  rarely  all  nearly  equal.  Petals  on  rather  long 
claws ; standard  nearly  orbicular,  longer  than  the  lower  petals  ; wings  oblong  ; 
keel  incurved.  Stamens  free.  Ovary  sessile  or  rarely  shortly  stipitate,  with  2 
ovules  on  short  funicles  ; style  subulate,  often  more  or  less  dilated  downwards ; 
stigma  small,  terminal.  Pod  ovate,  flat  or  turgid,  2-valved.  Seed  reniform, 
strophiolate. — Shrubs.  Leaves  alternate  or  rarely  opposite  or  in  verticils  of  3, 
simple.  Stipules  linear-lanceolate  or  setaceous,  brown  and  scarious,  closely 
pressed  on  the  branch,  and  more  or  less  united  in  the  axil  of  the  leaf,  the  points 
or  sometimes  nearly  the  whole  stipule  free  and  spreading,  or  the  stipules  minute 
and  free,  rarely  quite  deficient,  those  of  the  floral  leaves  often  much  enlarged 
whilst  the  lamina  is  reduced.  Flowers  yellow  orange  or  mixed  with  purple, 
rarely  pink,  either  axillary  and  solitary  and  then  frequently  collected  in  leafy 
heads  or  tufts  near  the  ends  of  the  branches,  or  crowded  in  terminal  heads  and 
surrounded  within  the  floral  leaves  by  imbricate,  scarious,  brown  bracts  or 
enlarged  stipules  without  any  lamina.  Bracts  under  each  flower  usually  small. 
Bracteoles  persistent,  either  close  under  the  calyx  or  adnate  with  its  tube.  Ovary 
villous  or  rarely  glabrous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia,  presenting  considerable  diversity  in  foliage,  inflorescence, 
and  calyx,  and  closely  allied  in  character  to  the  other  Podalyriete  with  2 ovules  and  strophiolate 
seeds,  yet  not  generally  difficult  to  distinguish.  From  Gastrolobium  it  differs  chiefly  in  habit,  in 
the  persistent  bracteoles,  and  the  more  sessile,  less  turgid  pod  ; from  Dilhcynia,  which  is  even 
closer  connected  with  it,  the  bracteoles  close  to  or  upon  the  calyx  afford  the  most  prominent 
distinction,  although  accompanied  usually  by  other  slight  differences  in  habit  or  in  flower.  In 
the  following  distribution  of  its  species,  the  sections  proposed,  founded  on  foliage  and 
inflorescence,  are  perhaps  scarcely  worthy  of  ranking  higher  than  so  many  series. — Benth. 

Sect.  I.  Eupultenaea. — leaves  alternate,  with  recurved  or  revolute  margins.  Ovary  quite 


sessile. 

Bracteoles  adnate  to  (apparently  inserted  on)  the  calyx-tube  (except  in  P. 
pycnocepliala  ?) 

Flowers  in  dense,  terminal,  sessile  heads,  surrounded  by  imbricate 
stipular  bracts,  the  inner  ones  longer  than  the  pedicels. 

Stipules  minute.  Leaves  linear,  obtuse  or  retuse 1.  P.  retusa. 

Stipules  conspicuous,  often  1 line  long  or  more. 

Leaves  shortly  obovate,  coriaceous,  shining  above,  densely  silky- 

white  underneath 2.  P.pycnocephala. 

Leaves  narrow-oblong,  obtuse.  Flower-heads  large,  silky-hairy. 

Petals  persistent 3.  P.  myrtoides. 

Leaves  Linear. 

Leaves  nearly  sessile,  obtuse,  or  with  a fine  point.  Flower-heads 

softly  villous.  Bracts  deciduous 4.  P.  polifolia. 

Leaves  on  petioles  of  2 to  4 lines.  Bracts  few 5.  P.  petiolaris. 

Leaves  linear-acute  or  rarely  oblong.  Bracts  persistent  and  com- 
pletely covering  the  calyxes,  glabrous  or  rarely  slightly  silky  . . 6.  P.  paleacea. 

Flowers  few  or  in  small  heads,  the  bracts  shorter  than  the  pedicels. 

Leaves  under  Jin.  long. 

Leaves  not  bilobed,  obovate,  a little  cuneate,  the  margins  slightly 

recurved 7.  P.  Hartmannii. 

Leaves  linear-cuneate,  obtuse  or  truncate 8.  P.  microphylla. 

Bracteoles  close  under  the  calyx,  but  free  from  it  or  scarcely  adnate. 

Leaves  small,  obovate,  very  silky  underneath,  glabrous  above  ....  2.  P.pycnocephala. 


Sect.  II.  (Euchilus. — Leaves  all  or  mostly  opposite  or  in  whorls  of  three,  flat,  concave  or  the 
margins  slightly  recurved,  often  1 or  'i-nerved  or  penniveined,  rarely  reticulate.  Flowers  axillary 
or  crowded  at  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Tivo  upper  lobes  of  the  calyx  much  larger  than  the  others. 
Ovary  often  contracted  at  the  base  into  a very  short  stipes. — Benth. 


Pultenm.]  XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^.  355 

Leaves  flat  or  concave,  with  flne  or  pungent  points.  Bracteoles  on  the 
calyx-tube.  Flowers  pedicellate.  Glabrous  or  pubescent.  Leaves  broad, 
flat  or  slightly  concave,  all  in  threes 0.  P.  ternata. 


(A  very  few  species  of  the  following  section  have  the  leaves  occasionally  irregularly  whorled, 
but  with  the  calyx-lobes  much  less  dissimilar.  A few  species  again  have  the  calyx  of  Euchilus, 
but  with  the  leaves  all  alternate.) — Bentli. 

Sect.  III.  Coelophyllum. — Leaves  all  alternate,  either  flattened  hut  more  or  less  concave, 
or  ivith  incurved  margins,  or  darker-coloured  underneath  than  above,  or,  if  linear-terete  or 
trigonous,  channelled  above,  1 or  3 -nerved  or  quite  nerveless,  without  transverse  veins  or  reticula- 
tions.— Benth. 

Leaves  terete  or  trigonous,  not  pungent,  channelled  above.  Stipules  united  at  the  base  within 
the  leaf,  at  least  on  the  young  shoots.  Flowers  in  dense  terminal  heads. — Benth. 

Bracteoles  close  under  the  calyx,  but  free  from  it.  Leaves  crowded,  in- 
curved, with  fine  points 10.  P.  ecliinula. 

Leaves  concave  or  nearly  flat,  rarely  terete  and  then  rigid,  but  not  pungent.  Flowers  axillary, 


or,  if  terminal,  solitary  or  in  small  leafy  heads  growing  out  into  leafy  shoots.  Bracteoles  inserted 
on  or  adnate  to  the  calyx-tube. — Benth. 

Flowers  sessile  or  nearly  so,  all  axillary. 

Calyx  2 upper  lobes  much  longer  than  the  others,  broad,  falcate  and 
united  to  the  middle.  Leaves  linear-terete  or  trigonous,  channelled 

above 12.  P.  setulosa. 

Calyx  2 upper  lobes  but  little  longer  than  the  others.  Leaves  small, 

oblong-cuneate,  obtuse 11.  P.  parviflora. 

Flowers  all  axillary,  pedicellate.  Stipules  small. 

Plant  more  or  less  villous.  Pedicels  short.  Leaves  small,  mostly 

obtuse,  2 to  4 lines  long  or  rather  more,  broad  or  narrow 13.  P.  villosa. 

Plant  glabrous.  Leaves  J to  lin.  long 14.  P.  flexilis. 

Leaves  concave  or  nearly  flat,  not  pungent.  Floivers  axillary,  or,  if  terminal,  solitary. 
Bracteoles  inserted  close  under  the  calyx,  but  free  from  it. — Benth. 

Plant  quite  glabrous.  Flowers  all  axillary.  Leaves  Jin.  long  or  more. 

Flowers  pedicellate.  Calyx  upper  lobes  large 15.  P.  euchila. 

Plant  pubescent.  Flowers  axillary.  Leaves  4 to  7 lines  long.  Flowers 
on  very  short  pedicels.  Calyx  rosy-white 16.  P.  Millari. 

1.  P.  retusa  (obtuse),  Sin.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  502,  and  in  Tram.  Linn. 
Soc.  ix.  247  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  113.  A shrub  with  slender  virgate  branches, 


often  angular  and  usually  silky-pubescent.  Leaves  linear  or  linear-cuneate, 
very  obtuse  or  more  frequently  emarginate,  and  sometimes  dilated  at  the 
end,  2 to  4 lines  or  rarely  Jin.  long  in  the  normal  form,  flat,  pale  underneath, 
but  usually  glabrous  on  both  sides.  Stipules  very  small.  Flowers  few,  in  small 
terminal  heads  sessile  within  the  last  leaves.  Bracts  imbricate,  the  inner  ones 
often  1J  line  long,  but  very  deciduous,  the  outer  ones  smaller.  Bracteoles 
broadly  linear,  inserted  on  the  calyx-tube.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long,  silky-hairy, 
the  2 upper  lobes  broader,  but  scarcely  more  united.  Standard  not  twice  as  long 
as  the  calyx.  Ovary  villous  ; style  filiform  almost  from  the  base.  Pod  broadly 
ovate,  almost  triangular,  about  3 lines  long,  rather  flat. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  112  ; 
Bot.  Mag.  t.  2081  ; Bot.  Reg.  t.  378. 

Hab.:  Shoal  water  Bay,  R.  Brown;  Glasshouse  Mountains  and  Brisbane  Kiver,  F.v.  Mueller; 
and  other  localities  in  southern  Queensland.  Flowering  in  July  and  August. 

Some  specimens  without  flowers,  from  Burnett  River,  Queensland,  F.  v.  Mueller,  appear  to  be 
nearly  allied  to  P.  retusa,  but  with  very  narrow  leaves,  almost  terete,  with  closely  revolute 
margins. — Benth. 

2.  P.  pycnocephala  (dense  flower-heads),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  114.  Branches  and  under  side  of  the  leaves  silvery-white  with  a soft 
dense  silky  pubescence.  Leaves  broadly  obovate,  obtuse  or  with  a short  recurved 
point,  3 to  4 lines  long,  coriaceous,  glabrous  smooth  and  shining  above,  the 
margins  slightly  recurved.  Stipules  appressed,  nearly  1 line  long.  Flowers  in 
dense  globular  heads,  sessile  above  the  last  leaves.  Bracts  imbricate,  broad, 
densely  covered  with  silky  hairs,  except  a narrow  margin.  Calyx  sessile,  nearly 
4 lines  long,  very  silky,  the  lobes  narrow,  acute.  Bracteoles  narrow-cuneate, 


356 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


[Pultenaa. 


shortly  3-toothed,  very  silky  outside,  inserted  at  the  very  base  of  the  calyx  or 
close  under  it  and  nearly  as  long.  Petals  not  half  as  long  again  as  the  calyx, 
mostly  persistent  after  flowering.  Pod  sessile,  acuminate,  oblique,  much  flattened, 
very  silky,  about  as  long  as  the  calyx. 

Hab.:  Between  Stanthorpe  and  the  N.  S.  Wales  border. 

An  elegant  species  allied  to  P.  myrtoides , but  distinct  in  indumentum,  as  well  as  in  the  shape 
of  the  leaf. — Benth. 

3.  P.  myrtoides  (Myrtle-like),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  81, 
and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  114.  A tall  shrub,  with  virgate  terete  branches,  usually  silky- 
pubescent.  Leaves  narrow-oblong,  often  more  or  less  cuneate,  obtuse,  with  a 
very  minute  point,  + to  fin.  long,  flat  or  the  margins  recurved,  glabrous  above, 
pale  and  sometimes  silky-pubescent  underneath.  Stipules  lanceolate,  acuminate, 
closely  pressed,  about  1 line  long.  Flowers  numerous,  nearly  sessile  in  dense 
globular  terminal  heads,  sessile  within  the  last  leaves,  which  are  however  rarely 
so  long  as  the  flowers.  Bracts  imbricate,  ovate  or  lanceolate,  silky-hairy  at  the 
edges.  Bracteoles  inserted  on  the  calyx-tube,  broadly  oblong  or  ovate,  very 
concave  and  keeled,  almost  boat-shaped,  1 to  1J  line  long.  Calyx  silky- 
pubescent,  2^  lines  long,  the  lobes  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united 
above  the  middle.  Petals  persistent  till  the  fruit  is  ripe.  Standard  nearly  twice 
as  long  as  the  calyx ; lower  petals  nearly  as  long,  the  keel  obtuse.  Ovary 
villous  ; style  flattened  at  the  base.  Pod  ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate,  about  4 
lines  long. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  Fraser;  in  the  Cypress  Pine  country, 
Leichhardt. 

4.  P.  polifolia  (Polium-leaved),  A.  Cunn.  in  Field.  N.S.  Wales,  346  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  115.  A shrub  with  terete  virgate  branches,  more  or  less  villous 
when  young,  with  soft  spreading  hairs.  Leaves  linear,  obtuse,  with  a fine  straight 
or  recurved  point,  the  margins  recurved  or  revolute,  in  some  specimens  all  under 
Mn.,  in  others  ljin.  long,  glabrous  or  rarely  hairy  above,  hoary  underneath,  and 
often  hirsute  with  long  hairs,  especially  on  the  midrib.  Stipules  rather  long, 
appressed.  Flowers  numerous,  in  dense  terminal  heads,  sessile  within  the  last 
leaves.  Bracts  broad,  imbricate,  softly  villous,  the  inner  ones  2 lines  long  and 
bifid.  Bracteoles  very  concave,  keeled,  inserted  on  the  calyx-tube.  Calyx  3 
lines  long,  softly  villous ; lobes  finely  acuminate,  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 
upper  ones  broad  and  united  at  the  base.  Standard  not  twice  as  long  as  the 
calyx ; lower  petals  shorter.  Ovary  hirsute,  tapering  into  the  style.  Pod  very 
oblique,  acuminate,  longer  than  the  calyx. — P.  rosmar ini folia,  Lindl.  Bot.  Reg.  t. 
1584  (the  West  Australian  origin  a mistake);  P.  mucronata,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t. 
1711?  (from  the  figure);  P.  rosmarinifolia,  Endl.  Nov.  Stirp.  Dec.  4 (with  the 
pubescence  rather  more  silky). 

Hab.:  North  Coast  Railway  Line. 

5.  P.  petiolaris  (long  petioles),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  82, 
and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  115.  A procumbent  or  straggling  shrub,  with  numerous 
ascending  branches,  hirsute  with  short  spreading  hairs.  leaves  on  remarkably 
long  petioles,  those  of  the  floral  ones  often  attaining  3 or  4 lines,  linear,  obtuse, 
with  a short  recurved  point,  ^ to  fin.  long,  the  margins  revolute,  often  sprinkled 
with  a few  hairs  above,  the  under  side  hirsute,  especially  the  midrib.  Stipules 
with  spreading  or  recurved  fine  points.  Flowers  in  dense  terminal  heads,  sessile 
within  the  last  leaves.  Bracts  few,  besides  the  stipules  of  the  floral  leaves. 
Bracteoles  inserted  above  the  middle  of  the  calyx-tube,  linear-subulate,  ciliate. 
Calyx  about  3 lines  long,  hirsute  ; lobes  acuminate,  rather  longer  than  the  tube, 


Pultencea.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


357 


the  2 upper  ones  united  to  the  middle.  Petals  not  much  longer  than  the  calyx- 
lobes,  the  keel  dark-coloured.  Ovary  very  silky-villous,  tapering  into  the  subulate 
style.  Pod  not  seen. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  A.  Cunningham, , F.  v.  Mueller  ; Burnett  River,  F.  v.  Mueller  and  others. 
Flowering  in  July. 

6.  P.  paleacea  (scaly),  Willd.  Spec.  PI.  ii.  506  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  115. 
A shrub  with  slender  diffuse  or  divaricate  branches,  silky-pubescent  when  young. 
Leaves  linear,  with  fine  straight  or  recurved  points  and  revolute  margins,  £ to  fin. 
long,  glabrous  above,  pale  and  usually  silky-hairy  underneath.  Stipules  appressed, 
often  2 lines  long.  Flowers  in  dense  but  not  large  terminal  heads,  sessile  within 
the  last  leaves.  Bracts  imbricate,  glabrous,  scarcely  ciliate,  completely  covering 
the  calyxes,  the  inner  ones  8 to  4 lines  long.  Bracteoles  inserted  on  the  calyx- 
tube,  concave,  carinate.  Calyx  silky-hairy,  about  3 lines  long,  the  lobes  lanceo- 
late, much  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  above  the  middle. 
Standard  nearly  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx  ; lower  petals  shorter.  Ovary  villous, 
gradually  tapering  into  a long  style.  Pod  compressed,  silky,  longer  than  the 
calyx,  and  tapering  into  the  long  persistent  silky  base  of  the  style. — Sm.  in 
Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  246;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  112;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  291. 

Hab.:  Southern  Queensland. 

7.  P.  Hartmannii  (after  C.  H.  Hartmann),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  viii.  166.  A 
pubescent  shrub.  Leaves  often  clustered,  2 to  5 lines  long,  obovate,  a little 
cuneate,  blunt,  the  margins  slightly  recurved,  herbaceous-chartaceous,  pale 
beneath,  the  petioles  rather  long  on  the  upper  part  of  the  branches.  Stipules 
about  1 line  long.  Flowers  in  terminal  heads  of  few  flowers.  Bracteoles  about 
1 line  long,  inserted  a little  above  the  base  of  the  calyx.  Calyx  sessile,  scarcely 

3 lines  long,  villous,  the  tube  and  lips  of  about  an  equal  length,  the  two  superior 
ones  a little  broader  and  shorter.  Standard  with  claw  about  5 lines  ; keel  petals 
dark  purple.  Ovary  sessile,  silky.  Style  scarcely  3 lines  long,  pilose. — F.  v.  M.,  l.c. 

Hab.:  Rockhampton,  C.  H.  Hartmann  (F.  v.  M.) 

8.  P.  microphylla  (small  leaves),  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  112  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  117.  A dwarf,  diffuse,  much-branched  shrub,  the  branches  slender, 
hoary  silky-pubescent  or  villous.  Leaves  linear-cuneate,  usually  narrow  and  3 to 

4 lines  long,  truncate  or  retuse,  with  a recurved  point  and  revolute  margins ; 
sometimes  longer  and  flatter,  rounded  at  the  end,  with  a recurved  point,  but 
never  exceeding  ^in.,  usually  glabrous  above  and  hoary  tomentose  underneath, 
rarely  softly  villous  when  young.  Stipules  very  small  spreading  or  recurved. 
Flowers  in  the  upper  axils  on  very  short  pedicels,  or  2 or  3 together  at  the  ends 
of  the  short  brancblets.  Bracts  very  small  or  none  besides  the  stipules  of  the 
floral  leaves.  Bracteoles  inserted  on  the  calyx-tube,  small,  linear.  Calyx 
scarcely  2 lines  long,  hoary  or  silky-villous,  the  lobes  nearly  as  long  as  the  tube, 
the  2 upper  ones  broad  and  united  above  the  middle.  Standard  about  twice  as 
long  as  the  calyx ; lower  petals  shorter.  Ovary  villous.  Pod  broadly  and 
obliquely  ovate,  not  acuminate,  about  3 lines  long. — P.  stenopliylla , A.  Cunn.  in 
G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  124;  P.  uncinata,  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus. 
ii.  88. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Fraser ; since  by  many  collectors  from  many  parts  of  southern 
Queensland. 

Var.  cuneata.  Leaves  broadly  cuneate-truncate,  3 to  4 lines  long. — P.  cuneata,  Benth.  in  Ann. 
Wien.  Mus.  ii.  83. — To  this  belong  some  of  the  Queensland  specimens  from  Stanthorpe,  towards 
the  border  of  N.  S.  Wales. 

9.  P.  ternata  (leaves  in  threes),  F.  v.  M.  Frarjm.  i.  8,  and  iv.  21  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  122.  An  erect,  usually  glabrous,  often  glaucous  shrub,  the  branches 
terete.  Leaves  all  in  whorls  of  three,  in  the  original  form  broadly  rhomboidal, 


358 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS.®. 


[. Pultenaa . 


truncate,  or  shortly  tapering,  the  midrib  produced  into  a more  or  less  pungent 
point,  from  2 or  3 lines  to  fin.  long,  and  usually  rather  broader  than  long,  flat  or 
concave,  often  3 or  5-nerved  at  the  base.  Stipules  small.  Flowers  in  the  upper 
axils  on  pedicels  of  1 to  2 lines.  Bracteoles  subulate,  inserted  on  the  base  of  the 
calyx  Calyx  above  3 lines  long,  the  lobes  longer  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper 
ones  broad,  falcate,  acute,  united  above  the  middle,  the  lower  ones  lanceolate- 
subulate.  Petals  nearly  of  equal  length,  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx  ; keel  large, 
almost  hood-shaped,  very  obtuse.  Ovary  sessile,  glabrous,  tapering  into  the 
flattened  style.  Pod  ovate,  turgid,  about  3 lines  long. — Spadostyles  Cunninghamii, 
Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  81  ; Gastrolobium  Huegelii,  Henfr.  in  Gard.  Mag. 
i.  with  a fig.;  Aotus  cordifolius,  Lindl.  and  Paxt.  FI.  Gard.  i.  76,  not  of  Benth.; 
Spadostyles  ternata,  F.  v.  M.  First  Gen.  Hep.  12  ; Pultencea  oxalidifolia,  A.  Cunn. 
in  Steud.  Nom.  Bot.  ed.  2. 

Hab.:  Ranges  about  Helidon. 

The  normal  form  with  large  leaves  and  flowers. 

Var.  pubescem.  Branches  more  or  less  pubescent.  Leaves  broad  but  with  long  pungent 
points.  Pedicels  very  short.  Hab.:  Logan  River,  Rev.  B.  Scortechini. 

Var.  euspidata.  Branches  slender,  pubescent.  Leaves  small,  tapering  into  pungent  points. 
Pedicels  slender,  as  long  as  or  sometimes  longer  than  the  calyx. — Oxylobium  spinosum,  DC. 
Prod.  ii.  104;  Euchilus  cuspidatus,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Phil.  Inst.  Viet.  ii.  68.  Hab.:  Burnett  and 
Brisbane  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Wide  Bay,  Bidicill ; Ipswich,  Nernst;  very  common  in  southern 
Queensland.  Flowering  about  August. 

10.  P.  echinula  (rough),  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  112  (spelt  echinata  in  Spreng. 
Syst.  Cur.  Post.  173) ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  127.  Apparently  a straggling  shrub, 
the  older  branches  denuded  of  leaves  and  tuberculate  or  echinate  with  the  remains 
of  their  petioles.  Leaves  crowded  on  the  younger  branches,  often  incurved, 
linear-terete,  almost  subulate,  mucronate,  rarely  exceeding  |in.,  channelled  above 
by  the  involute  margins,  often  tuberculate  outside  and  sometimes  hirsute  with 
soft  hairs.  Stipules  rather  long.  Flowers  in  dense  heads,  sessile  within  the  last 
leaves,  with  few  bracts  besides  the  stipules  of  the  floral  leaves.  Bracteoles 
inserted  under  the  calyx,  oblong  or  lanceolate.  Calyx  2|  lines  long,  glabrous  or 
hirsute  ; lobes  lanceolate,  nearly  equal,  about  as  long  as  the  tube.  Standard  not 
twice  as  long  as  the  calyx ; lower  petals  rather  shorter.  Ovary  villous  ; style 
subulate.  Pod  not  seen. — Reichb.  Icon.  Exot.  t.  196. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Fraser. 

11.  P.  parviflora  (small-flowered),  Sieb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  132.  Branches 
numerous,  slender,  pubescent,  with  greyish  appressed  hairs ; leaves  oblong- 
cuneate,  obtuse,  1 to  2 or  rarely  3 lines  long,  concave,  or  with  incurved  margins, 
darker-coloured  underneath  with  a slender  midrib,  glabrous  or  sprinkled  with  a 
few  hairs  when  young ; stipules  appressed.  Flowers  few,  small,  in  the  upper 
axils  ; bracteoles  inserted  on  the  calyx-tube  near  its  base,  linear-subulate,  ciliate, 
2-stipulate.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long ; lobes  acuminate,  longer  than  the  tube, 
the  two  upper  ones  broad ; falcate  and  united  at  the  base.  Ovary  hairy  at  the 
top ; style  dilated  downwards.  The  leaves  on  the  Queensland  plants  longer 
and  more  hairy  than  those  of  the  other  colonies. 

Hab.:  Caloundra,  J.  Wilson.  Flowering  about  September. 

12.  P.  setulosa  (bristly),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  132.  Apparently  procumbent, 
with  silky-pubescent  branchlets.  Leaves  linear,  terete  or  trigonous,  channelled 
above,  mucronate,  2 to  3 or  rarely  4 lines  long,  glabrous  or  silky  pubescent. 
Stipules  appressed,  with  long,  fine,  erect  or  spreading  points.  Flowers  axillary, 
nearly  sessile,  forming  leafy  heads  or  clusters  at  or  below  the  ends  of  the 
branches.  Bracts  none  besides  the  floral  leaves.  Bracteoles  linear,  inserted  on 
the  base  of  the  calyx-tube,  often  2-stipulate.  Calyx  3 to  3f  lines  long,  slightly 


Pulteruea.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS.®. 


359 


silky-pubescent,  the  lobes  all  tapering  to  fine  points,  the  2 upper  ones  broad, 
falcate  and  united  above  the  middle,  the  lower  ones  shorter  and  much  narrower. 
Standard  scarcely  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Ovary  very  villous.  Style 
glabrous,  flattened  at  the  base.  Pod  ovate,  shorter  than  the  calyx. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  Bowman. 

13.  P.  villosa  (hairy),  Willd.  Spec.  PL  ii.  507  ; Benth.  FI.  Aastr.  ii.  134.  A 
low  or  spreading  much-branched  shrub,  pubescent  or  villous,  rust-coloured  when 
dry.  Leaves  usually  oblong  or  somewhat  cuneate,  but  varying  from  linear  to 
obovate,  obtuse  or  scarcely  pointed,  2 to  3 or  rarely  when  narrow  nearly  4 lines 
long,  concave  or  with  incurved  margins,  tubercular  or  hirsute  underneath,  the 
midrib  slender.  Stipules  small,  narrow  or  broad.  Flowers  usually  entirely 
yellow,  solitary  in  each  axil,  but  sometimes  forming  short  terminal  leafy  racemes. 
Pedicels  short  but  slender.  Bracteoles  inserted  on  the  calyx- tube,  but  sometimes 
very  near  its  base,  linear,  with  occasionally  1 or  2 set*  in  their  axil.  Calyx  from 
14  to  above  2 lines  long  ; lobes  acuminate,  longer  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones 
broad,  falcate  and  united  to  the  middle,  the  lower  ones  narrow.  Petals  nearly 
equal  in  length,  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Ovary  more  or  less  hairy ; style 
subulate.  Pod  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx. — Sm.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  503,  and  in 
Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  248;  Bot.  Mag.  t.  967  ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  113 ; P.  polygalifolia, 
Rudge  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  xi.  303,  t.  25;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  Ill;  P.lanata,  A. 
Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  83  (a  small-leaved  form). 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  Fraser,  F.  v.  Mueller.  Flowering  about 
August. 

Var.  latifolia.  Leaves  small,  very  pubescent,  from  narrow-euneate  to  broadly  obovate. 
Flowers  rather  large. — P.  ferruginea,  Rudge,  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  xi.  300,  t.  23  ; DC.  Prod.  ii. 
Ill;  P.  lanata,  Sieb.  PL  Exs.;  Spadostyles  ramulosa,  Endl.  Nov.  Stirp.  Dec.  21  (from  the 
description,  no  specimen  having  been  preserved). 

Var.  glabrescens.  Leaves  linear  or  narrow-oblong,  2 to  4 lines  long,  glabrous  or  slightly 
pubescent.  Flowers  of  the  common  variety.  Spadostyles  concolor,  Endl.  Nov.  Stirp.  Dec.  20, 
of  which  no  specimen  has  been  preserved,  is  probably,  from  the  description,  this  variety. 

P.  racemulosa,  Sieb.  PL  Exs.  n.  594;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  Ill,  is  not  in  any  of  the  sets  of  Sieber’s 
plants  which  I have  seen ; from  the  character  given  it  is  probably  one  of  the  numerous  forms  of 
P.  villosa. 

I give  all  the  varieties  mentioned  by  Bentham  in  the  Flora  Austr.,  for  the  plant  is  very 
variable,  and  doubtless  all  could  be  obtained  in  southern  Queensland. 

14.  P.  flexilis  (flexuous),  Sm.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  502,  and  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc. 
ix.  248  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  135.  A shrub  either  quite  glabrous  or  with  a few 
appressed  hairs  on  the  young  shoots  and  backs  of  the  leaves.  Leaves  linear  or 
linear-oblong,  often  slightly  cuneate,  obtuse  or  mucronate,  | to  lin.  long,  flat  or 
concave,  the  under  side  darker-coloured,  with  a prominent  midrib.  Stipules  very 
small.  Flowers  solitary  in  the  upper  axils,  shortly  pedicellate.  Bracteoles 
inserted  on  the  calyx  near  its  base,  small,  lanceolate.  Calyx  glabrous  or  slightly 
ciliate,  about  2 lines  long  ; lobes  rather  broad,  acute,  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 
upper  ones  broader  and  falcate.  Standard  fully  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx;  lower 
petals  not  much  shorter.  Ovary  with  a few  long  hairs  at  the  top  ; style  dilated 
downwards.  Pod  obliquely  ovate  or  ovate-oblong,  turgid,  about  3 lines  long. — 
DC.  Prod.  ii.  Ill ; Bot.  Reg.  t.  1694;  Dillwynia  teucrioides,  Sieb.  PL  Exs.;  P. 
Siveetii,  Don,  in  Steud.  Nomencl.  ed.  2. 

Hab.:  Helidon. 

Allied  in  habit  to  P.  euchila,  but  the  calyx-lobes  are  less  disproportioned,  the  bracteoles  are 
not  under  the  calyx,  the  style  less  dilated  at  the  base,  &c. — Benth. 

Var.  mucronata.  Leaves  narrow,  with  a fine  pungent  point. — Southern  parts  of  the  colony. 

15.  P.  euchila  (prominently  lipped),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  112;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
135.  A glabrous  shrub,  with  rather  slender  branches,  nearly  resembling  at  first 
sight  P.  flexilis , but  differing  in  bracteoles,  calyx,  and  style.  Leaves  linear- 
cuneate,  obtuse,  5 to  9 lines  long,  flat  or  slightly  concave,  of  a darker  or  a more 
silvery  colour  underneath  than  above,  the  midrib  slender.  Stipules  minute. 


PiltT  II.  D 


860 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^. 


[Pultenm. 


Flowers  axillary,  on  pedicels  of  2 to  3 lines.  Bracteoles  linear-subulate,  inserted 
close  under  the  calyx  and  shorter  than  its  tube.  Calyx  3 to  lines  long,  the 
lobes  much  longer  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  large,  falcate  and  united 
above  the  middle,  the  lower  ones  narrow-lanceolate.  Petals  nearly  equal,  half  as 
long  again  as  the  calyx,  the  keel  slightly  incurved.  Ovary  glabrous,  tapering 
into  the  much  dilated  style.  Pod  longer  than  the  calyx,  coriaceous,  turgid  when 
ripe,  with  a flat  point. — Dillwynia  cuneata,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.;  Spadostyles  Sieheri, 
Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  81. 

Hab.:  Near  the  Brisbane  River,  Leichhardt : Ipswich,  Nernst ; North  Coast  Railway  Line, 
Wellington  Point,  &c. 

16.  P.  IVEillari  (after  T.  Barclay  Millar),  Bail.  Ql.  Agri.  Journ.  v.  389.  A 
shrub  of  a few  feet,  the  branches  angular,  silky,  pubescent,  with  closely  appressed 
white  hairs.  Leaves  scattered  on  short  silky-hairy  petioles,  cuneate,  4 to  7 lines 
long,  rounded  at  the  top  and  2 to  3 lines  broad,  lateral  nerves  regular  and  rather 
distant,  the  prominent  midrib  ending  in  a minute  recurved  point ; bright  glossy 
on  the  upper,  pale-hoary  on  the  under  side.  Stipules  long  as  the  petioles,  dark 
with  spreading  recurved  fine  points  and  ciliate  margins.  Flowers  in  the  axils 
near  the  ends  of  the  branchlets  on  very  short  pedicels,  solitary.  Bracts  none. 
Bracteoles  inserted  on  the  calyx-tube  at  the  base,  scabrous,  narrow-lanceolate, 
dark,  long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Calyx  nearly  rosy-white,  silky  outside,  parallel- 
veined  inside,  about  3 lines  long,  the  lobes  of  equal  length  with  the  tube,  very 
narrow,  the  2 upper  ones  united  above  the  middle.  Standard  broader  than  long, 
4 lines  broad,  claw  about  1 line,  wings  narrow  with  claw  3^  lines  long  ; keel  still 
shorter,  dark-purple.  Ovary  silky,  tapering  into  a flattened  style.  No  pods  on 
the  specimens  collected. 

Hab.:  Herberton,  J.  F.  Bailey. 


16.  DILLWYNIA,  Sm. 

(In  honour  of  L.  W.  Dillwyn,  an  eminent  botanist.) 

Calyx-lobes  short  or  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  more  or  less  united 
in  an  upper  lip.  Petals  clawed  ; standard  broader  than  long  ; wings  narrow  ; 
keel  shorter,  straight  or  scarcely  incurved.  Stamens  free.  Ovary  shortly 
stipitate,  with  2 ovules  on  short  funicles ; style  erect,  rather  thick,  hooked  below 
the  top,  with  a truncate  or  thick  stigma.  Pod  nearly  sessile,  ovate  or  rounded, 
turgid,  2-valved.  Seeds  reniform,  strophiolate. — Heath-like  shrubs.  Leaves 
alternate  or  scattered,  simple,  narrow-linear  or  terete,  channelled  above.  Stipules 
none.  Flowers  yellow  or  orange-red,  few  together  in  axillary  or  terminal  racemes 
or  corymbs,  rarely  solitary.  Bracts  small,  brown,  very  deciduous ; bracteoles 
small  on  the  short  pedicels. 

The  genus  is  entirely  Australian.  It  differs  from  Aotus  in  the  strophiolate  seeds  and  in  the 
leaves  channelled  above  and  not  underneath,  from  Pultencea  in  the  bracteoles  at  a distance  from 
the  calyx  and  usually  deciduous. — Benth. 

Sect.  I.  Dillwyniastrum,  DC. — Calyx  distinctly  turbinate  at  the  base,  the  2 upper  lobes 
broad,  falcate,  and  united  to  the  middle.  Petals  deciduous  ; standard  on  a long  claw,  the  lamina 


above  twice  as  broad  as  long. 

Keel  obtuse,  much  shorter  than  the  wings. 

Racemes  terminal,  sessile,  corymbose  or  pedunculate 1.  D.  ericifolia. 

Flowers  all  axillary,  solitary  or  in  short  racemes  or  clusters 2.  D.Jloribunda. 


Sect.  II.  Xeropetalum,  R.  Br. — Calyx  obtuse  or  very  shortly  turbinate  at  the  base. 
Petals  persistent ; standard-claiv  shorter  than  the  calyx,  the  lamina  rather  broader  than  long  or 
rarely  twice  as  broad  as  long. 

Calyx-lobes  short,  the  2 upper  ones  united  in  a broad  upper  lip,  scarcely 
emarginate,  and  longer  than  the  lower  ones.  Leaves  rigid  and  pungent, 
keeled.  Flowers  mostly  corymbose 3.  D.  juniperina. 


Dillwynia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


361 


1.  3D.  ericifolia  (heath-leaved),  Sm.  Ann.  Bot.  i.  510;  Exot.  Bot.  t.  25,  and 
in  Tram.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  262  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  147.  An  erect  heath-like 
shrub,  usually  attaining  several  feet,  but  sometimes  dwarf  and  stunted ; the 
branches  erect  and  virgate,  or  short  and  divaricate,  glabrous  or  pubescent. 
Leaves  numerous,  rather  slender,  usually  ^ to  J4n.  long,  but  sometimes  nearly 
fin.  or  under  2 lines,  terete  or  scarcely  keeled,  straight  or  spirally  twisted  when 
dry,  obtuse,  with  a very  short  recurved  or  straight,  but  scarcely  pungent  point, 
rarely  quite  obtuse.  Flowers  yellow,  in  very  short  racemes  or  clusters,  sometimes 
several  together,  almost  sessile  in  a terminal  leafy  corymb,  sometimes  each  one 
on  a terminal  or  rarely  axillary  long  or  short  peduncle.  Calyx  glabrous,  silky- 
pubescent,  or  shortly  scabrous-hirsute,  2 to  3|-  lines  long,  distinctly  turbinate  at 
the  base,  the  lobes  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  broadly  rounded  and 
falcate,  united  to  the  middle.  Petals  deciduous  ; standard  with  a claw  usually 
as  long  as  the  calyx,  the  lamina  more  than  twice  as  broad  as  long  ; wings  much 
shorter ; keel  still  shorter,  obtuse.  Pod  ovate  or  nearly  globular,  slightly 
exceeding  the  calyx. — Pulteneea  retorta,  Wendl.  Hort.  Herrenh.  t.  9. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Island  and  many  other  southern  localities. 

Various  forms  assumed  by  this  plant  have  been  generally  recognised  as  species,  but  the 
differences  are  so  slight,  depending  chiefly  on  indumentum,  length,  and  degree  of  twisting  of  the 
leaves,  or  length  of  peduncles,  and  the  passages  from  the  one  to  the  other  so  gradual,  that  it  is 
often  very  difficult  to  separate  them  even  as  varieties.  The  following  are  the  most  prominent. — 
Benth.  This  applies  so  fully  to  the  species  in  Queensland  that  I thought  it  advisable  to  give 
the  forms  as  arranged  by  Mr.  Bentham : — 

a.  normalis.  Branches  pubescent.  Leaves  mostly  4 to  6 lines  long,  spreading,  twisted,  with 
straight  or  slightly  recurved  points.  Flowers  rather  large,  usually  rather  numerous,  in  sessile 
terminal  leafy  corymbs. — D.  ericifolia,  Sm.,  as  above;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  108;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t. 
1277 ; Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  78.  D.  ericoides,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.  n.  412,  and  FI.  Mixt. 
n.  585,  D.  pinifolia,  Sieb.  n.  424,  D.  seripliioides,  Endl.  Nov.  Stirp.  Dec.  14,  and  probably 
Aotus  ericoides,  Paxt.  Mag.  v.  51,  with  a fig. 

b.  pliylicoides.  Branches,  foliage,  and  calyx  scabrous,  pubescent  with  short  rigid  hairs. 
Leaves  mostly  2 to  3 lines  long,  spreading,  twisted,  with  straight  or  slightly  recurved  points  and 
less  slender  than  in  other  forms.  Flowers  nearly  sessile,  but  not  so  numerous  as  in  the  normal 
form. — D.  phylicoides,  A.  Cunn.  in  Field,  N.  S.  Wales,  347  ; Benth  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  78. 
D.  speciosa,  Paxt.  Mag.  vii.  27,  with  a fig.  raised  from  Baron  Huegel’s  seeds,  is  probably  this 
variety  or  very  near  it. 

c.  parvifolia.  Glabrous  or  nearly  so.  Leaves  mostly  2 lines  long  or  under,  spreading,  often 
twisted,  with  straight  or  slightly  recurved  points.  Flowers  rather  small,  usually  few,  the  clusters 
sessile  or  shortly  pedunculate. — D.  parvifolia,  R.  Br.  in  Bot.  Mag.  t.  1527  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t. 
559;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  108 ; Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  79;  T>,  micropliylla,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.  n. 
410,  and  553,  and  FI.  Mixt.  n.  586. 

d.  tenuifolia.  Branches  slightly  pubescent.  Leaves  2 to  4 lines  long  or  rarely  more,  spreading 
or  erect,  usually  straight  with  straight  or  recurved  points,  and  more  slender  than  in  other  forms. 
Flowers  few,  middle-sized,  the  clusters  sessile  or  nearly  so.  Calyx  glabrous  or  silky-pubescent. 
— D.  tenuifolia,  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  109  ; Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  79  ; D.  ramosissima, 
Benth.  l.c. 

e.  peduncularis.  Branches  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent.  Leaves  3 to  6 lines  long,  usually 
slender.  Flowers  middle-sized,  in  loose  clusters  of  2 or  3,  on  peduncles  usually  exceeding  the 
leaves  and  sometimes  several  times  as  long.  Calyx  usually  glabrous  or  nearly  so. — D. 
peduncularis,  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  78 ; D.  filifolia,  Endl.  Nov.  Stirp.  Dec.  13.  This 
variety  usually  appears  very  distinct  in  inflorescence,  assuming  the  aspect  of  D.  hispida,  a 
Victoria  and  South  Australia  species,  but  with  the  flowers  of  D.  ericifolia,  and  when  the 
peduncles  are  shorter  it  passes  gradually  into  the  vars.  tenuifolia  or  glaberrima. 

f.  glaberrima.  Quite  glabrous.  Leaves  usually  crowded,  rarely  very  spreading,  § to  Jin.  long 
or  often  more,  rather  slender,  not  twisted,  the  point  recurved  or  rarely  straight.  Flowers  rather 
large,  in  dense  terminal  corymbs,  sessile  or  shortly  pedunculate. — D.  glaberrima,  Sm.  in  Ann. 
Bot.  i.  510,  and  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  263  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  944  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  582;  Labill. 
PL  Nov.  Holl.  i.  109,  t.  139 : DC.  Prod.  ii.  108  ; Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  79 ; Hook.  f.  FI. 
Tasm.  i.  85. — B.  Brown,  a form  passing  into  the  vars.  peduncularis  or  tenuifolia. 

2.  D.  floribunda  (free  flowerer),  Sm.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  510;  Exot.  Bot.  t.  26, 
and  in  Tram.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  262  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  149.  A tall  erect  heath- 
like  shrub,  either  quite  glabrous  or  more  or  less  pubescent,  or  the  branches, 
foliage  and  calyxes  densely  hirsute.  Leaves  usually  crowded,  £ to  §in.  long  or 


862 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


[ Dillwynia . 


rather  more,  obtuse  or  with  a minute  point,  not  keeled,  straight,  sometimes  as 
slender  as  in  D.  ericifolia,  but  usually  thicker.  Flowers  on  very  short  pedicels, 
solitary  or  2 or  3 together,  all  axillary,  but  often  crowded  into  leafy  racemes 
below  or  very  near  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Bracts  often  broad  and  above 

1 line  long,  but  so  deciduous  as  to  be  rarely  seen.  Calyx  2 J to  8 lines  long,  with 
a distinct  turbinate  base,  the  lobes  short,  often  tipped  with  a small  gland,  the 

2 upper  ones  broad  falcate  and  united  to  the  middle.  Petals  deciduous ; 
standard  with  the  broad  claw  as  long  as  the  calyx,  the  lamina  more  than  twice  as 
broad  as  long ; wings  much  shorter ; keel  still  shorter,  obtuse.  Pod  scarcely 
exceeding  the  calyx. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  108  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  305  ; Benth.  in 
Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  79;  Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  85;  D.  ericifolia,  Sims,  Bot. 
Mag.  t.  1545,  not  of  Sm.;  D.  rudis,  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  109  ; D.  hispidula  and 
D.  teretifolia,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.;  D.  elegans,  Endl.  Nov.  Stirp.  Dec.  13  ; D.  clavata, 
Paxt.  Mag.  vii.  117. 

Hab.:  Frequent  in  southern  localities. 

The  flowers  of  this  species  are  not  to  be  distinguished  from  those  of  D.  ericifolia,  but  the 
infloresenee  appears  to  be  constant. — Benth. 

3.  D.  juniperina  (Juniper-like),  Sieb.;  Benth.  in  Hueg.  Enum.  33,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  150.  A rigid  shrub  with  divaricate  pubescent  or  loosely  villous 
branches.  Leaves  J to  Jin.  long,  very  straight,  strongly  keeled,  rigid,  with  strong 
pungent  points.  Flowers  nearly  sessile,  several  together  in  terminal  clusters,  or 
rarely  2 or  3 apparently  axillary.  Calyx  pubescent,  2 to  2J  lines  long,  scarcely 
turbinate  at  the  base  ; lobes  short,  the  2 upper  ones  united  into  a broad  upper 
lip,  either  quite  entire  or  minutely  emarginate.  Petals  persistent ; standard 
scarcely  twice  as  broad  as  long  ; wings  nearly  as  long ; keel  much  shorter  and 
obtuse.  Pod  about  as  long  as  the  calyx. — Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  401  ; D.  cinerascens, 
DC.  Prod.  ii.  109,  not  of  R.  Br. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay;  near  Dalby,  and  other  southern  localities. 


17.  PLATYLOBIUM,  Sm. 

(From  platy,  broad,  and  lobos,  a pod.) 

Calyx,  2 upper  lobes  very  large,  free  or  shortly  united  ; the  lower  ones  small 
and  narrow.  Petals  clawed ; standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  wings  oblong- 
obovate,  much  shorter  ; keel  obovate,  nearly  as  long  as  the  wings.  Stamens  all 
united  in  a sheath  open  on  the  upper  side ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile  or 
stipitate,  with  several  ovules  ; style  subulate,  incurved,  with  a small  terminal 
stigma.  Pod  sessile  or  stipitate,  very  flat,  winged  along  the  upper  suture, 
opening  elastically  in  2 valves,  rolled  back  but  not  separating  from  the  wing. 
Seeds  strophiolate. — Slender  shrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  entire  or  with  pungent 
angles,  reticulate.  Flowers  yellow,  solitary,  in  opposite  axils.  Bracts  brown  and 
scarious,  imbricate,  in  2 or  3 pairs  at  the  base  of  the  pedicels  ; bracteoles  similar 
but  longer,  under  the  calyx. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Eastern  Australia.  It  is  closely  allied  to  the  opposite-leaved  Bossiceas, 
differing  chiefly  in  the  pod,  and  generally  in  the  proportion  of  the  petals.—  Benth. 

1.  P.  formosum  (handsome),  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ii.  350,  and  Bot.  Nov. 
Holl.  17,  t.  6 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  153.  A handsome  shrub,  attaining  often 
4 or  5ft.,  the  branches  more  robust  than  in  the  preceding  species,  glabrous  or 
slightly  pubescent.  Leaves  from  broadly  heart-shaped  to  ovate  or  rarely  ovate- 
lanceolate,  acute,  with  a small  rigid  point  but  without  lateral  angles,  1 to  2in. 
long,  strongly  reticulate  and  rather  coriaceous,  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent 
underneath.  Pedicels  hairy,  often  fully  Jin.  long,  always  exserted  from  the 
bracts  at  their  base.  Calyx  4 to  5 lines  long,  very  hairy.  Standard  nearly  twice 
as  long ; wings  and  keel  shorter.  Ovary  stipitate,  villous  all  over  or  near  the 


Platylobium .] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS/E. 


363 


sutures  only,  with  about  8 ovules.  Pod  1 to  lMn.  long,  on  a stipes  of  from 
one-fourth  as  long  as  to  longer  than  the  calyx,  loosely  hairy  or  at  length 
glabrous. — Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  31;  Bot.  Mag.  t.  469;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  116; 
Paxt.  Mag.  xiii.  195,  with  a fig. 

Hab.:  North  Coast  Railway  Line.  Flowering  in  July. 

The  synonym  of  Cheilococca  apocynifolia,  Salisb.  Prod.  412,  given  by  Smith  under  Platylobium 
formosum,  in  Bot.  Nov.  Holl.  17,  and  copied  from  him  by  De  Candolle,  Endlicher,  and  many 
others,  appears  to  be  entirely  a mistake.  There  is  no  such  name  in  Salisbury’s  work,  and  the 
page  quoted  is  one  of  those  of  the  index. — Benth. 


18.  BOSSI/EA,  Yent. 

(After  M.  Boissier-Lamartiniere,  a companion  of  La  Perouse.) 

(Scottea,  R.  Br.;  Lalage,  Lindl.) 

Calyx,  2 upper  lobes  or  teeth  broader  and  usually  much  larger  than  the 
others,  distinct  or  united  in  an  upper  lip,  3 lower  ones  equal.  Petals  clawed ; 
standard  orbicular  or  reniform,  usually  reflexed  ; wings  narrow  ; keel  broader 
and  usually  shorter  than  the  wings,  rarely  longer  or  exceeding  the  standard. 
Stamens  all  united  in  a sheath  open  on  the  upper  side ; anthers  uniform,  ovate 
or  oblong,  versatile.  Ovary  stipitate  or  nearly  sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; style 
subulate,  incurved  ; stigma  small,  terminal.  Pod  sessile  or  stipitate,  flat,  not 
winged  ; valves  completely  separating,  thin,  with  the  edges  nervitorm  or  thickened. 
Seeds  strophiolate. — Shrubs  or  rarely  undershrubs,  occasionally  leafless;  branches 
terete  or  flattened,  very  rarely  angular  and  not  sulcate.  Leaves  alternate  or 
opposite,  simple,  entire  or  rarely  toothed,  often  articulate  on  a very  short  petiole. 
Stipules  small,  brown,  lanceolate  or  setaceous.  Flowers  axillary,  solitary  or  in 
clusters  of  2 or  3,  yellow  orange  or  red.  Bracts  at  the  base  of  the  pedicel,  2,  3, 
or  more,  imbricate,  the  outermost  very  small  and  persistent,  the  inner  ones  often 
much  longer  and  very  deciduous ; bracteoles  on  the  pedicel  very  small  and 
persistent,  or  longer  and  deciduous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia,  and,  with  Platylobium,  is  distinguished  from  other  Genistece 
by  the  anthers  all  perfectly  uniform,  attached  by  the  middle,  with  a more  perceptible  cou- 
nectivum. — Benth. 

Series  I.  Normales. — Leaves  alternate.  Calyx  upper  lobes  rounded  or  truncate.  Ovary 


glabrous  or  ciliate  on  the  edge.  Pod  sessile  or  stipitate,  glabrous. 

Branches  terete  or  slightly  compressed.  Leaves  distichous,  usually  small 
and  rigid. 

Keel  much  longer  than  the  standard. 

Leaves  ovate-cordate  or  cordate-lanceolate 1.  B.  carinalis. 

Leaves  linear-lanceolate,  rounded  or  narrowed  at  the  base 2.  B.  rupicola. 

Keel  shorter  than  the  standard. 

Leaves  mostly  above  Jin.  long,  ovate  or  oblong,  very  obtuse,  not 

coriaceous.  Stems  prostrate,  pubescent,  rarely  above  1ft  long  . . 3.  B.  prostrata. 

Leaves  mostly  under  Jin.  long,  rigid. 

No  thorns. 

Branches  not  compressed,  almost  silky.  Leaves  ovate-oblong. 

Petals  glabrous 4.  B.  Scortecliinii. 

Branches  pubescent.  Leaves  ovate  or  cordate. 

Pedicels  longer  than  the  leaves.  Pod  sessile,  thin,  with  nerve- 
like margins.  Ovules  6 or  move 5.  B.  buxifolia. 

Pedicels  short.  Pod  on  a long  stipes,  with  much  thickened 

margins.  Ovules  2 or  3 6.  B.  Brownii. 

Plant  quite  glabrous.  Pedicels  very  short.  Pod  on  a long  stipes. 

Ovules  2 or  3.  Leaves  obovate  or  rhomboidal.  Pod  with  thick 

margins  . . . . 7.  B.  rhombifolia. 

Branches  much  flattened  or  winged.  Leaves  distichous  or  none. 

Branches  leafy.  Keel  glabrous.  Pod  coriaceous,  the  stipes  much  longer 

than  the  calyx 8.  B.  lieterophylla. 


864  XLlIl.  LEGUMINOSiE.  [. Bossiaa . 

Branches  leafless,  winged. 

Keel  not  exceeding  the  standard,  glabrous.  Calyx  2 upper  lobes  broad 
and  united.  Pedicels  longer  than  the  bracts.  Pod  broad  with 

thickened  margins,  distinctly  stipitate.  Flowers  small 9 ■ B.  ensata. 

Keel  more  or  less  exceeding  the  standard.  Flowers  large. 

Stems  very  broad,  shortly  toothed.  Keel  longer  than  other  petals.  Pod 

long,  stipitate 10-  A.  Armitii. 

Stem-wings  broad,  with  very  projecting  lobes  or  angles  under  the 

nodes.  Keel  rather  longer  than  the  standard 11.  B.  phylloclada. 


1.  B.  carinalis  (referring  to  the  long  keel),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr. 
290,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  161  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ix.  45.  A shrub.  Branches 
terete,  softly  pubescent.  Leaves  distichous,  ovate  or  broadly  ovate-lanceolate, 
mostly  cordate,  mucronulate  or  scarcely  obtuse,  4 to  6 lines  long,  often  oblique  at 
the  base,  coriaceous,  prominently  veined,  minutely  hoary  or  glabrous.  Pedicels 
short,  with  small  bracteoles.  Calyx  4 to  5 lines  long,  quite  glabrous  and  rather 
thick,  the  lobes  much  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  in  a broad 
emarginate  upper  lip,  the  lower  ones  narrow  and  rather  shorter.  Standard  very 
broad,  half  as  long  again  as  the  calyx ; wings  twice  as  long,  and  keel  incurved, 
rather  narrow,  three  times  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Ovary  on  a long  stipes,  glabrous, 
with  8 to  10  ovules.  Pod  somewhat  hard,  plain,  Hin.  long,  -|in.  broad,  stipitate, 
blunt  at  both  ends,  with  transverse  wrinkles.  Seeds  brown,  compressed,  ovate, 
smooth,  2 to  3 lines  long.  Strophiole  1 line  long. 

Hab.:  Sandstone  gullies  of  the  Mantuan  Downs,  Mitchell ; Cape  River,  R.  Daintree. 


2.  B.  rupicola  (found  upon  rocks),  A.  Cunn.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
162.  A shrub  with  the  habit  and  flowers  of  B.  carinalis,  but  very  different 
leaves.  Branches  terete,  pubescent.  Leaves  distichous,  narrow-lanceolate,  acute, 
£ to  lin.  long,  rarely  2 lines  broad,  narrowed  or  scarcely  obtuse  at  the  base, 
coriaceous,  veinless  except  the  midrib.  Pedicels  short,  the  small  bracteoles  near 
the  base.  Calyx  3 to  3J  lines  long,  the  large  upper  lip  nearly  as  long  as  the  tube, 
the  narrow  lower  lobes  scarcely  shorter.  Standard  broad,  reflexed,  rather  longer 
than  the  calyx ; wings  longer,  obovate-falcate ; keel  broad  incurved,  exceeding  the 
calyx  by  5 or  6 lines.  Ovary  on  a long  stipes,  glabrous,  with  8 to  10  ovules. 
Pod  with  broad  thick  margins  when  young,  not  seen  ripe. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Fraser ; Mount  Lindsay,  at  an  elevation  of  5700ft.,  A.  Cunningham. 

3.  B.  prostrata  (prostrate),  R.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew  ed.  2,  iv.  268  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  162.  A small  shrub  or  undershrub  with  a thick  woody  stock  and 
slender  prostrate  stems  from  a few  inches  to  about  1ft.  long,  terete  or  slightly 
flattened,  usually  pubescent.  Leaves  distichous,  ovate  or  oblong,  obtuse  or 
scarcely  acute,  \ to  ^-in.  long  or  rarely  more,  glabrous  or  sprinkled  with  a few 
hairs,  the  petioles  frequently  rather  long  and  slender.  Pedicels  usually  much 
longer  than  the  leaves,  pubescent,  with  small  deciduous  bracteoles.  Calyx  about 
2 lines  long,  the  2 upper  lobes  broadly  falcate  and  united  above  the  middle,  the 
lower  ones  short  and  narrow.  Standard  fully  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx ; wings 
and  keel  considerably  shorter.  Ovary  very  shortly  stipitate,  glabrous  or  ciliate, 
with  6 to  10  ovules.  Pod  nearly  sessile,  glabrous,  f to  lin.  long,  rarely  2J  lines 
broad. — Bot.  Mag.  t.  1493;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  117  ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  94  ; B.  ovata, 
Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  303  ; B.  linnccoides,  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  129 ; B. 
nummular ia,  Endl.  Nov.  Stirp.  Dec.  22  ; B.  humilis,  Meissn.  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  85. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill,  and  in  more  southern  localities. 

In  the  southern  specimens  the  stems  are  usually  short,  very  slender,  almost  filiform,  in  several 
of  the  northern  ones  they  are  longer,  firmer,  and  more  branched.  The  size  of  the  flowers  is 
variable,  and  here  and  there  a few  flowers,  possibly  imperfect  ones,  may  be  found  abnormally 
almost  sessile. — Benth. 


Bossicea.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


865 


4.  B.  Scortechinii  (after  Rev.  B.  Scortechini),  F . v.  M.  South.  Science  Rec. 
■Jan.,  1883.  Shrub,  diffuse,  the  branches  not  compressed,  almost  silky.  Stipules 
minute,  semilanceolate.  Leaves  scattered,  ovate-oblong,  the  apex  blunt,  at  first 
clothed  with  appressed  hairs  on  both  sides,  afterwards  glabrous.  Pedicels  2 or  3 
lines,  or  as  long  as  the  calyx,  bearing  a pair  of  minute  bracteoles  about  the 
middle.  Calyx  silky.  Petals  glabrous.  Pod  linear-oblong,  hairy.  Seeds  7 to  9 

Hab.:  Dumaresque  River. 

5.  B.  buxifolia  (Box-leaved),  A.  Cunn.  in  frield,  N.  S.  Wales,  348;  Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  163.  A procumbent  or  diffuse  shrub  with  numerous  slender  terete 
or  scarcely  flattened  branches,  minutely  but  softly  pubescent.  Leaves  broadly 
ovate  or  almost  cordate,  acute,  1J  to  nearly  3 lines  long,  nearly  flat,  coriaceous, 
transversely  wrinkled  and  sprinkled  with  a few  hairs  above,  loosely  pubescent 
underneath.  Pedicels  much  longer  than  the  leaves,  with  small,  broad,  deciduous 
bracteoles  above  the  middle.  Calyx  minutely  pubescent,  scarcely  2 lines  long, 
the  upper  lobes  broad  truncate,  as  long  as  the  tube,  and  more  or  less  united,  the 
lower  ones  lanceolate  and  much  shorter.  Standard  broad,  twice  as  long  as  the 
calyx;  wings  and  keel  shorter.  Ovary  nearly  sessile,  glabrous  or  with  ciliate 
edges,  with  about  6 ovules.  Pod  usually  f to  lin.  long,  Jin.  broad,  almost  sessile, 
the  margins  nerviform. — B.  decumbem,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  9. 

Hab.:  Southern  parts  of  the  colony. 

6.  B.  Brownii  (after  Robert  Brown),  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  163.  An  erect 
apparently  stout  much-branched  shrub  of  3 or  4ft.,  with  the  habit  of  B.  rhombi- 
folia,  the  branches  terete  or  slightly  compressed,  softly  pubescent.  Leaves 
distichous,  broadly  ovate,  almost  cordate,  obtuse  or  mucronulate,  2 to  4 lines  long, 
mostly  oblique  at  the  base,  flat,  coriaceous,  loosely  pubescent  or  hairy.  Pedicels 
mostly  shorter  than  the  calyx,  with  deciduous  bracteoles  near  the  base.  Caly^ 
about  2 lines  long ; lobes  much  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  broad, 
rounded-falcate.  Petals  fully  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx,  the  keel  nearly  as  long 
as  the  standard.  Ovary  glabrous,  on  a long  stipes,  with  usually  3 ovules.  Pod 
f to  lin.  long,  about  5 lines  broad,  the  margins  broad,  the  upper  one  much 
thickened  ; the  stipes  longer  than  the  calyx. 

Hab.:  Port  Bowen,  R.  Brown,  also  in  Leichhardt's  Collection.  Allied  in  foliage  to  B.  buxifnlia. 
but  the  pod  is  that  of  B.  rhombifolia. — Bentli. 


7.  B.  rhombifolia  (leaves  rhomboid),  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  117  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  161.  A tall  much-branched  shrub,  quite  glabrous  and  often 
glaucous,  the  young  branches  often  flattened.  Leaves  distichous,  from  obovate 
to  broadly  rhomboidal,  usually  mucronulate,  2 to  3 or  rarely  4 lines  long  and 
broad,  coriaceous,  flat,  with  a prominent  midrib.  Pedicels  shorter  than  the  calyx, 
with  small  broad  bracteoles  below  the  middle.  Calyx  about  4 lines  long,  the 
lobes  much  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  very  broad  and  falcate,  the 
lower  ones  small  but  nearly  as  long.  Petals  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx,  nearly 
equal  in  length.  Ovary  on  a long  stipes,  quite  glabrous,  with  2 or  3 ovules.  Pod 
f to  nearly  lin.  long,  about  4 lines  broad,  the  margins,  especially  the  upper  one, 
broad  and  thick,  the  stipes  longer  than  the  calyx,  the  seeds  often  separated  by  a 
cellular  substance  as  in  B.  heterophylla. — B.  lenticularis,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1238, 
from  the  fig.,  not  of  Sieb. 

Hab.:  In  the  gullies  of  the  Mantuan  Downs,  Mitchell;  Dogwood  Creek,  Leichhardt ; Boyne 
River  (a  variety  with  small  obovate  leaves),  C.  H.  Hartmann  (F.  v.  M.) 

B.  rotundifolia,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  117,  from  “eastern  New  Holland,”  must,  from  the  character 
given,  be  closely  allied  to  the  above,  perhaps  a luxuriant  variety,  with  the  leaves  4 to  5 lines 
long  and  5 to  6 lines  broad. — Benth. 


366 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSrE. 


[Bossieea. 


8.  B.  heterophylla  (leaves  various),  Vent.  Jard.  Cels.  t.  7 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  165.  A low  glabrous  and  often  glaucous  shrub  or  undershrub;  branches  erect 
or  ascending,  from  under  1ft.  to  2ft.  high,  often  much  flattened.  Leaves 
distichous,  often  distant,  the  lower  ones  ovate,  obtuse  or  nearly  orbicular,  the 
upper  ones  gradually  narrower  or  sometimes  uearly  all  oblong  or  linear,  the  larger 
ones  f to  lin.  long,  rather  thick  and  nearly  veinless.  Pedicels  shorter  than  the 
leaves,  with  small  bracteoles  below  the  middle.  Calyx  2f  to  nearly  3 lines  long, 
the  lobes  all  short,  the  upper  ones  very  broadly  falcate.  Standard  very  broad, 
twice  as  long  as  the  calyx  ; keel  rather  shorter,  deeply  coloured.  Ovary  stipitate, 
glabrous,  with  about  6 ovules.  Pod  f to  lin.  long,  on  a stipes  longer  than  the 
calyx,  the  margins  much  thickened,  the  seeds  separated  by  cellular  tissue. — DC. 
Prod.  ii.  117  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  271  ; Platylobium  lanceolatum , Andr.  Bot.  Rep. 
t.  205;  P.  ovatum,  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  266;  Bossiaa  lanceolata,  Bot.  Mag.  t.  1144; 
B.  ovata,  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  128. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill,  in  Hook.  Herb.,  but  possibly  some  error;  Burleigh  Heads,  Rev.  B. 
Scortechini. 

9.  B.  ensata  (sword-shaped  stems),  Sieb,  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  117  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  167.  An  erect  or  procumbent  glabrous  leafless  shrub,  very  variable  in 
aspect,  branches  flat  and  winged.  Flowers  small,  on  short  pedicels,  with  small 
bracteoles.  Calyx  rarely  above  2 lines  long,  the  keel  much  shorter  than  the 
standard,  and  glabrous.  Ovary  distinctly  stipitate,  glabrous,  with  about  6 ovules. 
Pod  broad  stipitate. — Sweet,  FI.  Austr.  t.  51  ; B.  rufa,  Maund,  Bot.  t.  81  not 
of  R.  Br. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

10.  B.  Armitii  (after  W.  E.  Armit),  F.  v.  M.  Frgam.  ix.  44.  Plant  leafless, 
branches  f to  fin.  broad,  wings  very  shortly  dentate.  Pedicels  solitary,  almost 
as  long  as  the  calyx.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  minute.  Calyx  2 or  3 lines  long, 
the  upper  lobes  oblique-semiovate,  the  lower  ones  deltoid-lanceolate,  bearded  on 
the  margin.  Standard  and  wings  shorter  than  the  keel  petals.  Pod  almost 
oblong,  on  long  stipes.  Seeds  few. 

Hab.:  Gilbert  River,  in  the  fissures  of  rocks,  R.  Daintree  ; Herbert  River,  W.  E.  Armit. 

11.  B.  phylloclada  (branches  leaf-like),  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Phil.  Inst.  Viet.  iii. 
52  ; Tragm.  ii.  120  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  168.  A tall  glabrous,  glaucous,  leafless 
shrub,  the  branches  flattened  and  very  broadly  winged,  the  wings  forming  angles 
projecting  under  the  nodes  from  f to  fin.;  sometimes  acute  and  pungent-pointed ; 
sometimes  shorter  and  obtuse.  Pedicels  solitary  or  more  frequently  clustered, 
rather  slender,  with  small  narrow  bracteoles  about  the  middle.  Calyx  4 or  5 
lines  long,  the  2 upper  lobes  as  long  as  the  tube,  broadly  obovate  and  distinct, 
the  lower  ones  very  small.  Standard  not  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx  ; wings  shorter 
and  narrow  ; keel  as  long  as  the  standard  or  rather  longer,  woolly-ciliate  on  the 
edge.  Ovary  stipitate,  glabrous,  with  10  to  12  ovules.  Pod  above  lin.  long, 
fin.  wide,  very  flat,  with  slightly  thickened  margins. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Br. 


19.  TEMPLETONIA,  R.  Br. 

(After  J.  Templeton.) 

(Nematophyllum,  F.  v.  M.) 

Calyx,  2 upper  lobes  or  teeth  completely  united  or  rarely  distinct,  2 lateral  ones 
often  shorter,  lowest  one  the  longest.  Standard  orbicular  or  obovate,  usually 
reflexed ; wings  narrow,  usually  shorter  than  the  standard ; keel  as  long  as  the 
standard  or  shorter,  the  petals  slightly  united.  Stamens  all  united  in  a sheath 


Templetonia .] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


367 


open  on  the  upper  side ; anthers  alternately  long  and  erect,  and  short  and 
versatile.  Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate,  with  several  ovules  or  rarely  only  2 or  8 ; 
style  incurved,  filiform  ; stigma  small,  terminal.  Pod  sessile  or  stipitate,  much 
flattened,  ovate-oblong  or  linear,  often  oblique,  completely  dehiscent,  the  valves 
coriaceous,  without  thickened  sutures.  Seeds  strophiolate. — Glabrous  shrubs  or 
rarely  undershrubs,  occasionally  leafless,  the  branches  angular  or  sulcate-striate. 
Leaves  when  present  alternate,  simple,  entire.  Stipules  minute  or  spinescent. 
Flowers  axillary,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together,  red  or  yellow.  Bracts  2 or  3 at  the 
base  of  the  pedicel  as  in  Bossier, a,  but  usually  very  minute ; bracteoles  at  or  above 
the  middle. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  has  as  much  variety  in  habit  as  Bossicea,  from  which  it 
differs  in  calyx,  anthers,  and  pod,  as  well  as  in  the  striate-sulcate  branches. — Benth. 

Stems  leafy.  Stipules  minute  or  inconspicuous.  Leaves  narrow-linear. 

Calyx  small,  the  lobes  scarcely  acute,  shorter  than  the  tube 1.  T.  Muelleri. 

Calyx-lobes  acuminate,  much  longer  than  the  tube 2.  T.  Hookeri. 

Stems  leafless.  Stipules  minute,  inconspicuous.  Flowers  small.  Stems  terete  3.  T.  egena. 

1.  T.  Muelleri  (after  Baron  von  Mueller),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  169.  A 
glabrous  shrub  or  undershrub,  with  a thick  stock  and  ascending  or  erect  virgate 
stems  of  1 to  2ft.,  more  or  less  sulcate-striate.  Leaves  few,  the  lower  ones 
narrow-oblong,  the  upper  ones  linear,  1 to  l|dn.  long,  or  in  some  specimens 
attaining  3in.,  obtuse  or  with  short  recurved  points,  flat  or  concave,  coriaceous, 
continuous  or  rarely  when  narrow  showing  a tendency  to  an  articulation. 
Stipules  minute.  Pedicels  solitary  or  2 together,  the  bracteoles  above  the  middle 
^ to  1 line  long.  Calyx  2 to  2^  lines  long,  the  4 lobes  nearly  equal  and  shorter 
than  the  tube,  the  uppermost  broad,  the  lowest  rather  longer.  Standard  broad, 
reflexed,  more  than  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx ; keel  broad  and  nearly  as  long  as 
the  standard  ; wings  much  narrower  and  shorter.  Ovary  stipitate,  with  about  6 
ovules.  Pod  oblong,  oblique,  about  fin.  long  and  5 lines  broad,  the  stipes 
longer  than  the  calyx  ; valves  convex,  almost  turgid. — Bossicea  stcnophylla,  F.  v. 
M.  Fragm.  i.  9. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill,  Leichhardt ; Dawson  River,  F.  v.  M. 

2.  T.  Hookeri  (after  Sir  J.  D.  Hooker),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  170.  A tall 
slender  shrub  with  erect  branches,  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent.  Leaves  rather 
crowded,  linear-terete  or  almost  filiform  with  a short  recurved  point,  1 to  3in. 
long  or  even  more,  glabrous,  usually  articulate  near  the  middle,  showing  that  the 
lower  portion  is  a petiole,  with  which  the  leaflet  is  occasionally  continuous. 
Stipules  minute.  Pedicels  filiform,  often  lin.  long,  with  small  bracteoles  near 
the  top.  Calyx  5 to  6 lines  long,  the  4 lobes  acuminate,  longer  than  the  tube, 
the  uppermost  with  an  inflexed  point,  the  lateral  ones  shorter,  the  lowest 
considerably  the  longest.  Petal-claws  short ; standard  broad,  6 to  7 lines  long  ; 
keel  about  as  long  ; wings  much  smaller.  Ovary  stipitate,  with  about  6 ovules. 
Pod  f to  above  lin.  long,  about  4 lines  broad,  on  a stipes  longer  than  the  calyx, 
oblique  when  young,  but  scarcely  so  when  full  grown  ; valves  coriaceous,  slightly 
convex. — Ncmatophyllum  Hookeri,  F.  v.  M.  in  Hook.  Kew  Journ.  ix.  20. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Broivn. 

3.  T.  egena  (destitute  of  leaves),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  170.  A tall 
glabrous,  leafless  shrub,  with  numerous  erect  terete  sulcate  branches,  the  nodes 
hearing  only  minute  protuberances.  Pedicels  solitary  or  2 together,  rarely  1 line 
long,  with  small  orbicular  bracteoles  close  under  the  calyx.  Calyx  1£  line  long 
or  rather  more,  with  5 nearly  equal  broad  obtuse  teeth,  much  shorter  than  the 
tube,  the  lowest  rather  the  longest.  Petals  on  rather  long  claws,  scarcely  twice 
as  long  as  the  calyx,  the  standard  rather  longer  than  the  others.  Ovary  shortly 


368 


XLIII.  LEGUM1N0S.E. 


[Templctonia. 


stipitate,  with  6 to  8 ovules.  Pod  nearly  sessile,  obliquely  long,  6 to  8 lines  long 
and  about  4 broad,  the  valves  very  coriaceous  and  slightly  convex. — Dariesia  egena, 
F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  118  ; Bossiaxi  egena,  F.  v.  M.  in  Hook.  Kew 
Journ.  viii.  43  ; Fragm.  iii.  94. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  by  F.  v.  M.  in  Census  Austr.  Plants. 


20.  HOVEA,  R.  Br. 

(After  A.  P.  Hove.) 

(Poiretia,  Sm.;  Plagiolobium,  Sweet;  Platychilum,  Delawn.) 

Calyx,  upper  lobes  united  into  a broad  truncate  upper  lip,  entire  or  slightly 
emarginate,  the  3 lower  ones  much  smaller,  lanceolate.  Petals  clawed  ; standard 
nearly  orbicular,  emarginate  ; wings  shorter,  obliquely  obovate,  auriculate  on  the 
inner  side  at  the  base  ; keel  much  shorter,  slightly  incurved,  obtuse,  the  petals 
slightly  cohering.  Stamens  all  united  in  a sheath  open  on  the  upper  side  and 
sometimes  split  also  on  the  lower  side,  or  rarely  the  uppermost  stamens,  and  very 
rarely  the  lowest  free ; anthers  alternately  long  and  erect  and  short  and  versatile. 
Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate  with  2 or  rarely  more  ovules  ; style  incurved,  rather 
thick  ; stigma  terminal.  Pod  sessile  or  stipitate,  turgid,  very  obliquely  globular 
or  ovoid,  the  valves  at  length  entirely  separating.  Seeds  reniform  on  short 
funicles,  strophiolate. — Shrubs.  Leaves  alternate,  simple,  entire  or  prickly- 

toothed,  glabrous  above,  often  tomentose  underneath.  Stipules  setaceous,  minute 
or  none.  Flowers  blue  or  purple,  in  axillary  clusters  on  very  short  racemes  or 
rarely  solitary. 

The  genus  is  entirely  Australian,  and  easily  recognised  by  the  habit,  the  calyx,  the  colour  of 
the  flower  and  short  turgid  pod,  although  it  is  closely  connected  with  Templctonia,  through  H. 


longipes. — Benth. 

Ovary  and  pod  sessile. 

Pod  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent. 

Stems  erect.  Leaves  numerous,  long,  mostly  narrow-linear  . . . . 1.  H.  linearis. 

Stems  decumbent.  Lower  leaves  ovate,  upper  ones  lanceolate  or  linear  2.  H.  lieterophylla. 

Leaves  narrowed  at  both  ends 3.  H.  acntifolia. 

Pod  tomentose  or  villous.  Leaves  oblong,  lanceolate  or  linear,  obtuse  at 

both  ends 4.  H.  longifolia. 

Ovary  and  pod  stipitate,  always  glabrous.  Leaves  with  numerous  oblique 

parallel  veins.  Calyx  lower  lobes  nearly  as  long  as  the  upper  . ...  5 . H.  longipes. 


1.  H . linearis  (linear  leaves),  R.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hart.  Kew  ed.  2,  iv.  275; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  172.  Apparently  a low  shrub,  with  erect  not  much-branched 
stems,  of  1 to  2ft.,  closely  tomentose  or  pubescent  or  at  length  nearly  glabrous. 
Leaves  nearly  all  narrow-linear,  1^  to  Sin.  long,  obtuse  with  a small  point, 
coriaceous  with  recurved  margins,  more  or  less  reticulate,  quite  glabrous  or 
pubescent  underneath,  the  lower  ones  occasionally  lanceolate  or  oblong-elliptical. 
Flowers  rather  small,  solitary  or  2 or  3 in  each  axil,  on  very  short  pedicels. 
Calyx  about  2 lines  long,  more  or  less  silky-hairy.  Staminal  sheath  open  on  the 
upper  side  only.  Ovary  glabrous.  Pod  sessile,  glabrous,  about  4 lines  broad  and 
long. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  115  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1222?;  Poiretia  linearis,  Sm.  in 
Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  ix.  304. 

Hab.:  Southern  parts  of  the  colony. 

This  very  much  resembles  the  long  linear-leaved  varieties  of  H.  longifolia.  It  appears  to  be  a 
smaller  plant,  the  leaves  are  not  so  coriaceous,  the  flowers  smaller  and  the  pod  shorter,  and 
always  quite  glabrous.  The  specimens  figured,  Bot.  Beg.  t.  463,  and  in  Paxt.  Mag.  xii.  75,  seem 
to  connect  this  also  with  the  following. — Benth. 

2.  XI.  heterophylla  (various-leaved),  A.  Cunn.  in  Hook.  FI.  rTasm.  i.  93,  t. 
15  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  172.  Very  closely  allied  to  H.  linearis,  and  perhaps  a 
variety  only,  although  usually  very  different  in  aspect.  Stems  decumbent  or 
prostrate  at  the  base,  with  ascending  or  erect  slender  branches,  clothed  with  a 


Hovea.  J 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^. 


369 


short  close  tomentum.  Lower  leaves  ovate,  intermediate  ones  lanceolate,  the 
uppermost  narrow,  or  sometimes  quite  linear,  and  rarely  above  l^in.  long, 
obtuse  or  almost  acute,  the  margins  often  recurved,  reticulate  and  glabrous  or 
slightly  hairy  underneath.  Flowers  of  H.  longifolia  or  rather  larger.  Calyx  2 to 
3 lines  long,  the  lower  lobes  sometimes  nearly  as  long  as  the  upper  lip,  but  very 
narrow.  Ovary  and  pod  of  H.  longifolia,  but  quite  glabrous  or  shortly  pubescent. 

Hab.:  Stradbroke  Island,  Fraser,  A.  Cunningham;  Sandstone  Hills,  towards  Brisbane, 
Leichhardt ; Severn  Kiver,  C.  H.  Hartmann.  Flowering  in  July. 

3.  XI.  acutifolia  (leaves  acute),  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Sgst. 
ii.  126;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  174.  A tall  shrub,  allied  to  the  var.  pannosa  of 
H.  longifolia,  but  with  the  leaves  always  narrowed  at  both  ends.  Branches 
densely  tomentose-villous.  Leaves  elliptical-oblong  or  lanceolate,  acuminate  or 
acute,  narrowed  at  the  base,  mostly  2 to  3in.  long,  and  the  larger  ones  lin.  broad 
in  the  middle,  the  margins  slightly  recurved,  densely  but  minutely  reticulate 
above,  loosely  tomentose-villous  underneath,  the  primary  veins  few,  nearly 
transverse  or  arcuate.  Flowers  in  clusters  of  2 or  3,  like  those  of  H.  longifolia, 
var.  pannosa  or  rather  larger.  Ovary  sessile,  tomentose-villous.  Pod  rhomboid- 
ovate,  sessile,  6 to  8 lines  long,  black  when  ripe,  turgid  almost  glabrous. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Fraser,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others;  Pine  River, 
Fitzalan ; common  on  southern  coast  lands. 

Wood  close-grained,  firm,  yellow.- — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  115. 

4.  H.  longifolia  (long-leaved),  R.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew  ed.  iv.  275  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  172.  A stout,  erect  shrub,  attaining  8 to  10ft. ; branches  usually 
erect,  softly  tomentose  or  the  smaller  varieties  bushy  and  stunted.  Leaves 
oblong-lanceolate  or  linear,  obtuse,  with  or  without  a small  callous  point,  all 
under  fin.  long  in  some  varieties,  in  others  all  above  2in.,  thickly  coriaceous, 
with  flat  recurved  or  revolute  margins,  glabrous  above  and  smooth  and  shining  or 
densely  reticulate,  the  primary  veins  when  conspicuous  transverse  or  arcuate, 
more  or  less  rusty  tomentose  underneath.  Flowers  sometimes  white  (F.  v.  M.), 
very  shortly  pedicellate  in  axillary  clusters,  which  sometimes  grow  out  into 
interrupted  spikes  or  racemes,  or  rarely  solitary.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  small, 
usually  obtuse.  Calyx  tomentose,  2 to  3 lines  long ; lobes  all  short,  the  upper 
broad  truncate  lip  not  much  longer  than  the  lower  lobes,  which  are  usually  more 
obtuse  than  in  H.  linearis.  Standard  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Staminal  tube 
open  on  the  upper  side  only.  Ovary  tomentose.  Pod  sessile,  4 to  6 lines  broad, 
softly  rusty-tomentose  or  almost  villous. 

Hab.:  Near  Mount  Owen,  Mitchell;  Newcastle  Range  and  Suttor  River,  F.  v.  Mueller; 
Shoalwater  Bay  passages,  R.  Brown ; Moreton  Bay,  A Cunningham ; near  Warwick,  Beckler  ; 
Ipswich,  Nernst;  to  Rockingham  Bay. 

Leaves  sometimes  on  the  inland  plants  infested  with  Asterina  Hoveafolia,  Cke.  and  Mass. 

The  following  forms,  usually  considered  as  distinct  species,  pass  into  each  other  by  such 
insensible  gradations,  that  I am  unable  to  distinguish  them  otherwise  than  as  varieties. — Benth. 

Var.  normalis.  Leaves  linear  with  revolute  margins,  usually  1£  to  3in.  long,  but  in  some 
specimens  shorter.  Flower-clusters  often  shortly  racemose. — H.  longifolia,  Bot.  Reg.  t.  614  ; 
Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  994 ; H.  racemulosa,  Benth.  in  Bot.  Reg.  1843,  t.  4 (the  supposed  Swan  River 
origin  probably  a garden  mistake).  Some  specimens  are  very  difficult  to  distinguish  from  H. 
linearis. — Benth. 

Var.  lanceolata.  Leaves  oblong  or  lanceolate  or  broadly  linear,  with  flat  or  recurved  margins, 
§ to  3in.  long,  often  rather  thick,  closely  but  often  densely  tomentose  underneath. — 11.  lanceolata, 
ftims,  Bot.  Mag.  t.  1624;  Bot.  Reg.  t.  1427  (a  weak  slender  form?);  DC.  Prod.  ii.  115;  H. 
apiculata,  A.  Cunn  , and  H.  mucronata,  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  126 ; II.  purpurea, 
Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1457  ; Maund,  Botanist,  t.  72  ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  93,  but  scarcely  of  Sweet ; 
H.  Becltleri,  F.  v.  M.  in  Lirmeea,  xxv.  391.- -Extends  over  the  whole  range  of  the  species  and  the 
most  common  form.  The  more  northern  specimens  have  often  elongated  interrupted 
inflorescences,  and  the  tomentum  of  the  under  side  of  the  leaves  thin  and  pale-coloured. — Benth. 

Var.  pannosa.  Leaves  linear  or  oblong,  rather  large  and  very  coriaceous,  the  tomentum  soft 
and  dense,  often  almost  woolly.  Flowers  rather  large,  in  close  clusters,  the  calyx  densely 
hirsute,  the  lower  lobes  narrow  and  acute.  Pod  often  rusty-woolly. — H.  purpurea,  Sweet,  FI. 


370 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS/E. 


[Hovea. 


Austr.  t.  13 ; Bot.  Beg.  t.  1423  ; H.  villosa,  Lindl.  in  Bot.  Beg.  t.  1512  ; H.  pannosa,  A.  Cunn.  in 
Bot.  Mag.  t.  3053 ; H.  lanigera,  Lodd.  in  Steud.  Nom.  Bot-  ed.  2 ; H.  ramulosa,  A.  Cunn.  in  Bot. 
Beg.,  under  n.  4 (a  narrow-leaved  form  connecting  it  with  the  normal  variety). — Benth.  Palmer 
Biver  in  the  north,  and  Helidon  and  other  localities  in  the  south. 

5.  H.  longipes  (stipes  long),  Benth.  in  Huey.  Emm.  37,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
174.  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree  resembling  at  first  sight  some  forms  of  H.  lonyi- 
folia,  but  readily  distinguished  by  the  venation  of  the  leaf  as  well  as  by  the  flower 
and  fruit.  Branches,  under  side  of  the  leaves  and  calyxes  hoary  or  slightly  rusty, 
with  a close  or  soft  tomentum.  Leaves  from  oval-elliptical  to  oblong  or  lanceo- 
late, obtuse  with  a minute  callous  point,  f to  lfin.  long,  coriaceous  with  slightly 
recurved  margins,  glabrous  above  and  marked  with  numerous  oblique  parallel 
slightly  reticulate  primary  veins.  Flowers  usually  2 or  3 together,  each  on  a 
pedicel  longer  than  the  calyx,  with  2 minute  bracteoles  near  the  end.  Calyx  very 
broadly  campanulate,  scarcely  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  or  teeth  all  very  short,  the 
upper  lip  broad  and  truncate,  but  scarcely  exceeding  the  lower  lobes.  Standard 
very  broad,  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Ovary  quite  glabrous.  Pod  4 or  5 lines 
broad  and  long,  very  coriaceous,  quite  glabrous,  on  a stipes  from  the  length  of  the 
calyx  to  twice  as  long. — H.  leiocarpa,  Benth.  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  289. 

Hab.:  Bockingham  Bay  ; Keppel  Bay,  R.  Brown ; dry  forest  and  sheltered  valleys,  Mantuan 
Downs  and  Maranoa  Biver,  Mitchell;  Burdekin  Biver,  F.  v.  Mueller;  edge  of  the  scrub,  near 
Bockhampton,  Thozet ; Fitzroy  Biver,  Bowman. 

Wood  a dark-yellow  and  of  pretty  figure,  close-grained,  and  very  hard  ; should  be  useful  in 
turnery. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  115a. 


21.  GOODIA,  Salisb. 

(After  Dr.  Mason  Good.) 

Calyx,  2 upper  lobes  united  in  a 2-toothed  upper  lip,  3 lower  ones  equal.  Petals 
clawed ; standard  orbicular ; wings  narrow ; keel  broader,  incurved,  obtuse. 
Stamens  all  united  in  a sheath  open  on  the  upper  side ; anthers  all  versatile, 
alternately  smaller.  Disk  annular  between  the  stamens  and  ovary.  Ovary 
stipitate,  with  2 to  4 ovules  ; style  subulate,  incurved  ; stigma  small,  terminal. 
Pod  stipitate,  flat,  valves  thin  with  a nerviform  edge.  Seeds  strophiolate. — 
Shrubs.  Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate,  with  entire  leaflets.  Flowers  yellow  mixed 
with  purple,  in  terminal  or  leaf-opposed  racemes.  Stipules,  bracts  and  bracteoles 
membranous,  but  so  deciduous  as  to  he  rarely  seen  but  in  very  young  branches 
or  racemes. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia , and  although  nearly  allied  to  Bossiaa  in  its  flowers  and 
fruit,  has  the  inflorescence  of  Crotalaria,  and  differs  from  all  other  Genistea;  in  its  pinnately 
trifoliolate  leaves.  It  would  therefore  be  equally  well  placed  under  Galegece.—  Benth. 

G.  (1)  polysperma,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  117,  is  Argyrolobium  Andrewsianum,  Steud.,  a South  African, 
not  an  Australian  plant. 

G.  retusa,  Mackay,  and  G.  suhpubescens,  Sweet,  in  Steud.  Nom.  Bot.  ed.  2,  are  unpublished 
garden  names,  probably  of  some  varieties  of  G.  lotifolia. — Benth. 

1.  Gr.  lotifolia  (Lotus-leaved),  Salisb.  Parad.  Loud.  t.  41  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  177.  A tall  much-branched  shrub,  either  quite  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots 
minutely  pubescent  and  often  glaucous.  Leaflets  ovate  or  obovate,  very  obtuse, 
x to  fin.  long,  the  lateral  ones  usually  at  a considerable  distance  from  the  terminal 
one,  the  petiole  slender.  Racemes  loose,  many-flowered,  2 to  4in.  long.  Calyx 
21  to  3 lines  long,  the  lower  lobes  linear-lanceolate,  nearly  as  long  as  the  tube, 
the  upper  lip  very  broad,  more  or  less  2-toothed  at  the  top.  Standard  about  twice 
as  long  as  the  calyx,  notched,  yellow  with  a purple  base  ; lower  petals  rather 
shorter.  Pod  varying  from  f to  nearly  lin.  long  and  3 to  4 lines  broad,  on  a 
stipes  much  longer  than  the  calyx,  the  upper  suture  often  dilated,  the  valves  thin 


Goodia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


871 


with  transverse  reticulations  sometimes  very  prominent,  sometimes  scarcely 
perceptible. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  117;  Bot.  Mag.  t.  958;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  696  ; 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  97  ; Meissn.  in.  PI.  Preiss.  i.  88. 

Hab.:  Mount  Lindsay  and  other  parts  of  southern  Queensland. 

G.  medicaginea,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  10,  the  prevailing  Continental  form,  with  shorter  and 
smoother  pods,  passes  gradually  into  the  more  common  Tasmanian  form. — Benth. 

22.  CROTALARIA,  Linn. 

(From  the  Greek,  on  account  of  the  seeds  rattling  in  the  dry  pods.) 

Calyx-lobes  nearly  equal,  or  the  2 upper  ones  and  the  3 lower  ones  more  or  less 
united.  Standard  orbicular  or  ovate  ; wings  shorter  ; keel  incurved  or  angled, 
terminating  inwards  in  a straight  or  incurved  beak.  Stamens  all  united  in  a 
sheath,  open  along  the  upper  side  ; anthers  alternately  long  and  erect  and  short 
and  versatile.  Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate,  with  2 or  more  ovules ; style  much 
incurved  or  suddenly  bent  inwards,  with  a longitudinal  line  of  hairs  above  the 
middle  on  the  inner  side  (sometimes  very  small) ; stigma  terminal.  Pod  turgid 
or  inflated,  continuous  inside.  Seeds  not  strophiolate,  on  slender  funicles. — 
Herbs  or  shrubs.  Leaves  simple  or  digitately  compound  with  1,3  or  (in  species 
not  Australian)  5 or  7 leaflets  often  marked  with  pellucid  dots.  Stipules  free 
from  the  petiole,  occasionally  decurrent  along  the  stem,  frequently  small  or 
wanting.  Flowers  yellow  or  blue,  in  simple  terminal  racemes,  becoming  some- 
times leaf-opposed,  with  a bract,  often  very  small,  under  each  pedicel  and  minute 
bracteoles  adnate  to  the  calyx-tube  or  just  below  it. 

A very  large  and  well-marked  genus,  widely  dispersed  over  the  tropical  and  warm  regions  both 
of  the  New  and  the  Old  World. 

Series  I.  Alatae. — Diffuse  or  suberect  pubescent  perennials.  Leaves  simple.  Stipules 
decurrent  as  a persistent  wing  to  the  branches.  Racemes  all  lateral,  leaf -opposed,  1 toU-flowered. 
Pod  stipitate,  linear-oblong , glabrous. 

Suberect,  stipular  wing  broad.  Leaves  thin-oblong,  obtuse,  or  subacute. 

Peduncles  elongated,  often  leafy.  Pods  long  stalked 1.  C.  alata. 

Series  II.  Simplicifolise. — Leaves  simple,  continuous  with  the  short  petiole,  the 
Australian  species  all  herbs  or  undershrubs. 

Ovary  and  pod  pubescent  or  villous. 


Leaves  ovate.  Stipules  leafy,  semilunar  or  falcate.  Flowers  blue  . . 2.  C.  verrucosa. 

Leaves  oblong,  linear,  or  rarely  obovate.  Stipules  setaceous  or  none. 

Flowers  yellow. 

Ovules  2,  Pod  usually  1-seeded,  not  exceeding  the  calyx.  Flowers 

small 3.  C.  crispata. 

Ovules  numerous.  Pods  many-seeded,  above  lin.  long.  Flowers 

rather  large 4.  C.juncea. 

Ovary  and  pod  quite  glabrous. 

Upper  leaves  usually  linear.  Petals  and  pod  not  exceeding  the  calyx. 

Calyx  3 to  4 lines  long,  silky-pubescent  or  shortly  villous,  the  2 
upper  lobes  united 5.  C.  linifolia. 

Calyx  lin.  long,  densely  hirsute  with  long  spreading  hairs,  the 
upper  lobes  free • 7.  C.  calycina. 

Leaves  round-oblong.  Peduncles  3 to  6-flowered.  Bracts  and  corolla 

very  small.  Pod  oblong,  6 to  8-seeded 6.  C.  humifusa. 

Upper  leaves  broad,  oblong-cuneate  or  rarely  almost  linear.  Petals 
and  pod  much  longer  than  the  calyx. 

Leaves  oblong-cuneate.  Flowers  large  in  loose  racemes.  Calyx 

4 to  6 lines  ; pod  l£in.  long 8.  G.  retusa. 

Leaves  oval-elliptical  or  oval-lanceolate.  Flowers  numerous  in 

dense  racemes.  Calyx  not  above  3 lines,  pod  under  fiu.  long  . . 9.  C.  Mitchelli. 


Series  III.  Unifoliolatte. — Leaves  simple,  the  petiole  articulate  or  geniculate  above  the 
middle.  Stem  shrubby. 

Flowers  under  Jin.  long  ; standard  obtuse. 

Leaves  pubescent  or  villous,  at  least  underneath.  Stipules  none  or 

not  decurrent 10.  C.  Novce-Hollandice. 

Whole  plant  quite  glabrous.  Stipules  decurrent 11.  C.  crassipes. 

Flowers  ljin.  long  or  more  ; standard  acute  or  acuminate 12.  C.  Cunninghamii. 


372  XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE.  [ Crotalaria . 

Series  IV.  Digritatae.— Leaves  all  or  mostly  compound  with  3 rarely  5 digitate  leaflets. 
Herbs  or  shrubs. 

Ovules  2.  Pod  small,  as  broad  as  long.  Herb  with  small  flowers  . . 13.  C.  trifoliastruin. 

Ovules  many.  Pod  oblong,  much  longer  than  the  calyx. 

Ovary  and  pod  sessile  or  nearly  so. 

Calyx  deeply  lobed.  Standard  almost  acute,  slightly  exceeding  the 

calyx.  Pod  hirsute  with  spreading  hairs 14.  C.  incana. 

Calyx  divided  to  the  middle.  Standard  broad  and  obtuse,  much 
longer  than  the  calyx.  Pod  pubescent,  tomentose,  or  almost 
glabrous 15.  C.  dissitijlora. 

Calyx-teeth  lanceolate.  Corolla  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Pod 

shortly  stalked,  nearly  glabrous 16.  C.  striata. 

Ovary  and  pod  on  a long  stipes.  Flowers  large. 

Leaflets  3.  Standard  acute 17.  C.  laburnifolia. 

Leaflets  usually  5.  Standard  very  obtuse 18.  C.  quinquefolia. 

1.  *C.  alata  (winged),  Hamilt.;  J.  G.  Baker  in  Hook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  69. 
An  erect  soft-wooded  shrub,  1 to  4ft.  high,  stem  and  leaves  clothed  with  a short 
silky  pubescence.  Leaves  subsessile,  from  obovate  to  obovate-oblong,  2 to  4in. 
long.  Stipules  forming  wings  from  one  node  to  nearly  the  next,  lanceolate 
deltoid.  Racemes  bearing  few  yellow  flowers,  on  elongated  often  leafy  peduncles. 
Bracts  small,  persistent,  ovate,  acuminate.  Calyx  about  5 lines  long,  densely 
silky,  tube  campanulate.  Bracteoles  inserted  above  the  base.  Corolla  not  much 
exserted.  Pod  linear-oblong,  long-stalked,  glabrous,  about  2in.  long.  Seeds 
30  to  40. 

Hab.:  An  Indian  species  now  naturalised  in  many  localities. 

2.  C.  verrucosa  (warted),  Linn.:  DC.  Prod.  ii.  125;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
179.  A stout  erect  minutely  pubescent  annual  of  1|  to  3ft.;  branches  divaricate 
with  prominent  angles  almost  winged.  Leaves  usually  ovate-rhomboidal,  2 to 
4in.  long,  but  passing  sometimes  into  ovate-acuminate  or  almost  lanceolate  and 
5 or  Gin.  long,  always  very  obtuse.  Stipules  semilunar  or  falcate,  horizontally 
spreading.  Flowers  pale-blue,  in  loose  terminal  or  leaf-opposed  racemes.  Calyx 
about  4 lines  long,  the  lobes  acuminate,  longer  than  the  tube,  all  free,  the  lowest 
rather  the  narrowest.  Standard  broad,  above  |fn.  diameter.  Ovary  sessile,  very 
villous  all  over  or  on  the  inner  side,  with  above  20  ovules.  Pod  oblong,  villous, 
1^  to  2in.  long. — Wight,  Ic.  t.  200  ; Bot.  Mag.  3034  ; Rheede  Hort.  Mai.  ix.  t. 
29  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  54,  ix.  156. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Armit;  Endeavour  River,  It.  Broicn ; Cape  Upstart,  M‘Gillivray ; 
Bowen  River,  Bowman;  Rockhampton,  Tliozet ; Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallachy. 

The  species  is  common  in  East  India,  and  is  now  spread  over  many  parts  of  tropical  Africa 
and  America. — Benth. 

3.  C.  crispata  (crispate),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  179.  A low 
much-branched  softly  villous  herb,  the  stems  diffuse  or  ascending  and  not 
exceeding  1ft.  Leaves  from  obovate-oblong  to  narrow  oblong-cuneate,  or  broadly 
linear,  very  obtuse,  ^ to  lin.  long,  villous  on  both  sides.  Flowers  small,  few,  in 
short  loose  terminal  racemes.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  minute,  ovate-acute  or 
lanceolate,  villous  outside,  glabrous  inside.  Calyx  about  3 lines  long,  deeply 
cleft,  the  3 lower  lobes  shortly  united,  the  2 upper  ones  broader,  all  lanceolate, 
very  glabrous  and  sometimes  viscous  inside,  villous  outside,  the  margins  often 
recurved  and  crisped  after  flowering.  Petals  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx.  Ovary 
sessile,  very  villous,  with  2 ovules.  Pod  ovoid,  villous,  scarcely  exceeding  the 
calyx.  Seed  usually  solitary,  black  and  shining. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 

This  plant  is  referred  by  F.  v.  Mueller,  Fragm.  iii.  55,  to  C.  ramosissima,  Roxb.,  which  it 
resembles  in  many  respects,  but  which,  in  its  large  flowers  and  broad  reflexed  viscous  bracts,  is 
nearer  to  C.  lunulata,  Heyne  (India).  Both  these  species  are  allied  to  C.  paniculata  (Trop. 
Asia),  and  C.  crispata  is  undoubtedly  connected  with  them,  although  rather  more  distinct  from 
all  than  they  are  from  each  other. — Benth. 


Crotalaria .] 


XLIII.  LEGUMIN0S2E. 


378 


4.  C.  juncea  (rash-like),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  125  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  179. 
An  erect  annual,  attaining  many  feet,  with  few,  erect,  sulcate-striate,  silky- 
pubescent  branches.  Leaves  simple,  nearly  sessile,  oblong  or  linear,  obtuse,  1 to 
3in.,  or  when  narrow,  4in.  long  or  more,  glabrous  above  or  nearly  so,  pubescent 
underneath.  Flowers  rather  large,  yellow,  not  numerous,  in  a long  terminal 
raceme.  Calyx  tomentose,  4 to  6 or  even  7 lines  long,  deeply  divided  into  narrow- 
lanceolate  nearly  equal  lobes,  the  2 upper  ones  truncate  or  booked  at  the  top. 
Petals  slightly  exceeding  the  calyx,  the  standard  usually  pubescent,  and  some- 
times purpurascent  (F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ix.  156).  Ovary  sessile,  villous,  with  about 
20  ovules.  Pod  above  lin.  long,  densely  clothed  with  a rusty  tomentum. — Andr. 
Bot.  Rep.  t.  422;  Bot.  Mag.  t.  490;  Roxb.  Cor.  PL  t.  198;  W.  and  Arn.  Prod. 
FI.  Ind.  185  (with  the  synonyms  given);  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  51  ; C. fenestrata, 
Bot.  Mag.  1933,  and  t.  26,  ix.  in  Rbeede  Hurt.  Mai. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  Ii.  Brown  ; Logan  River,  Fraser ; Port  Denison,  Bowman ; Rockhampton, 
Thozet,  Dallachy ; Wide  Bay,  Leichhardt. 

The  species  is  common  in  East  India,  where  it  is  much  cultivated  for  the  fibrous  bark,  used 
as  a substitute  for  hemp  under  the  name  of  Sunn.- -Benth. 

5.  C.  linifolia  (flax-leaved),  Linn,  f.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  128;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  180.  A perennial  with  a thick  rhizome,  or  sometimes  annual,  exceedingly 
variable  in  aspect,  usually  silky  pubescent  or  villous,  sometimes  clothed  with  long 
spreading  hairs  or  with  a close  or  woolly  white  tomentum,  often  drying  black. 
Stems  erect  or  ascending,  from  a few  inches  to  1-J-ft.  high.  Leaves  simple,  the 
lower  ones,  or  nearly  all  in  the  smaller  forms,  obovate  or  oblong,  obtuse  and 
mostly  under  |in.  long,  the  upper  ones,  or  nearly  all  in  the  elongated  varieties, 
narrow-oblong  or  linear,  1 to  2in.  long,  obtuse  or  almost  acute.  Flowers  small, 
yellow,  in  loose  terminal  racemes.  Calyx  3 to  4 lines  long,  divided  nearly  to  the 
base  into  2 lips,  the  upper  one  2- toothed,  the  lower  one  3-lobed  to  the  middle. 
Petals  not  exceeding  the  calyx.  Ovary  sessile,  glabrous,  with  10  to  20  ovules. 
Pod  ovoid-globular,  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  FI.  Ind. 
190;  Benth.  in.  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  ii.  569;  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  55; 
C.  stenopliylla,  Vog.;  Benth.  l.c. ; C.  melanocarpa,  Wall.;  Benth.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  B.  Brown  : Endeavour  River,  Keppel  Bay,  Shoal- 
water  Bay,  &c.,  It.  Broivn ; Cape  York,  M'Gillivray ; Percy  Island,  A.  Cunningham;  Rock- 
hampton, Thozet  and  others;  Port  Denison,  Fitzalan ; Moreton  Bay,  M‘Gillivray,  F.  v.  Mueller, 
and  others.  A very  common  plant  in  Queensland. 

R.  Brown’s  herbarium  comprises  a particularly  instructive  series  of  specimens  connecting  the 
different  forms,  which  have  at  first  sight  the  appearance  of  distinct  species.  Amidst  all  these 
varieties  the  species  is  easily  recognised  by  the  calyx  and  pod.  —Benth. 

6.  C.  humifusa  (low-spreading  habit),  Grah.;  J.  G.  Baker  in  Hook.  FI.  Brit. 
Ind.  ii.  67.  Stems  slender,  flexuose,  much  branched,  densely  clothed  with  short 
spreading,  yellow-brown  silky  hairs.  Leaves  nearly  sessile,  very  obtuse,  mem- 
branous, pale,  glaucous  on  the  under  side,  equal  at  the  base,  \ to  lin.  long. 
Peduncles  curved,  densely  silky,  usually  two  or  three  times  as  long  as  the  leaves, 
sometimes  leafy  below.  Pedicels  cernuous,  lower  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Calyx 
about  1|-  line  long,  densely  silky  ; teeth  linear,  very  long.  Corolla  yellowish,  not 
exserted.  Pod  long  stalked,  3 lines  long.  Seeds  6 to  8. 

Hab.:  Here  and  there  from  Brisbane  River  to  Rockingham  Bay. 

7.  C.  calycina  (calyx  large),  Scliranck , PI.  Rar.  Hort.  Monac.  t.  12  ; Bmth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  180.  A decumbent  or  nearly  erect  annual,  1 to  l^ft.  high,  not 
much  branched,  villous  with  appressed  or  scarcely  spreading  hairs.  Leaves 
simple,  nearly  sessile,  from  short  and  oblong  to  lanceolate  or  linear  and  2 to  6in. 
long,  glabrous  or  nearly  so  above,  villous  underneath.  Flowers  in  terminal 
racemes,  remarkable  for  their  large  pendulous  calyx,  often  fully  lin.  or  more  long, 
thickly  covered  with  long  spreading  rusty  hairs,  deeply  divided  into  nearly  equal 


374 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[ Crotalaria . 


lobes,  the  2 upper  ones  rather  broader.  Petals  pale  yellow,  shorter  than  the  calyx. 
Ovary  sessile,  glabrous,  with  above  30  ovules.  Pod  oblong,  not  exceeding  the 
calyx. — Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  ii.  564;  C.  anthylloides,  D.  Don;  W.  and 
Arn.  Prod.  FI.  Ind.  181,  and  of  some  others,  not  of  Lam. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Torres  Straits  ; Endeavour  River  and  Broadsound,  7?.  Brown  ; Rockhampton, 
Thozet ; Fitzroy  River,  Dallachy  ; Port  Deuison,  Fitzalan. 


8.  C.  retusa  (blunt  leaves),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  125 ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
181.  An  erect  perennial  or  undershrub  of  1^  to  3ft.,  with  few  stiff  erect  branches, 
hoary  with  a short  pubescence.  Leaves  simple,  cuneate-oblong,  very  obtuse  or 
retuse,  1^  to  3in.  long,  glabrous  above,  hoary  or  silky-pubescent  underneath. 
Flowers  yellow,  rather  large,  pendulous.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  as  in  the  other 
Australian  species  small  and  narrow.  Calyx  4 to  6 lines  long,  slightly  pubescent, 
the  tube  broad,  the  lobes  longer  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  rather  broader, 
the  lateral  ones  shortly  united  with  the  narrow  lowest  one.  Standard  broadly 
orbicular,  J to  lin.  diameter.  Ovary  sessile,  glabrous,  with  18  to  20  ovules.  Pod 
glabrous,  much  inflated,  often  attaining  lAin.  in  length. — Bot.  Reg.  t.  253  ; Bot. 
Mag.  t.  2561 ; W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  187  ; Rheede,  Hort.  Mai.  ix.  t.  25  ; F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  iii.  51. 

Hab.:  Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallachy,  and  many  other  localities  in  tropical  Queensland. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  globe,  both  in  the  New  and  the 
Old  World,  but  chiefly  near  the  sea. — Benth. 


9.  C.  IVIitchelli  (after  Sir  T.  Mitchell),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  120, 
and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  181.  A perennial  with  a thick  stock  and  erect  branching  stems 
of  1^  to  3ft.,  more  or  less  pubescent  or  tomentose.  Leaves  ovate-elliptical,  ovate- 
lanceolate,  or  rarely  almost  obovate  or  narrow-oblong,  obtuse  but  usually  less  so 
than  in  C.  retusa,  2 to  3 or  rarely  4in.  long,  glabrous  above,  hoary  or  loosely 
pubescent  underneath.  Flowers  much  smaller  and  more  numerous  than  in  C. 
retusa,  in  a dense  terminal  raceme  often  attaining  4 to  6in.  Calyx  rarely  3 lines 
long,  slightly  pubescent,  the  lobes  scarcely  longer  than  the  tube.  Standard  5 to 
6 lines  diameter.  Ovary  sessile,  glabrous,  with  8 to  10  ovules.  Pod  under  lin. 
long. 

Hab.:  Bed  of  the  Balonne  River,  Mitchell ; Dawson  and  Brisbane  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Wide 
Bay,  Bidwill;  Rockhampton,  Thozet,  Dallachy  ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan. 

Much  as  the  shape  of  the  leaves  varies,  they  are  always  broader  and  less  cuneate  than  in  C. 
retusa,  and  the  pellucid  dots  are  much  less  conspicuous. — Benth. 

The  three  following  species  appear  to  be  anomalous  in  the  development  of  their  flowers. 
Most  of  the  specimens  of  C.  Novte-Hollandice  have  the  lower  buds  of  the  raceme  still  unopened 
whilst  the  upper  ones  are  fully  out,  and  I have  observed  it  also  in  one  or  two  racemes  of  C. 
Cunninghamii,  in  another  I see  undeveloped  buds  irregularly  mixed.  The  only  2 specimens  of 
C.  crassipes  are  not  in  a state  to  show  the  order  of  development.  It  remains,  however,  as  yet 
doubtful  whether  the  inflorescence  is  really  centrifugal,  or  whether  the  develobment  of  the  lower 
buds  has  been  from  some  cause  retarded  after  their  first  appearance. — Benth. 


10.  C.  Novae-Hollandiae  (of  New  Holland  [Australia]),  DC.  Prod.  ii. 
127;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  181.  An  erect  shrub,  of  2 or  3ft.,  with  terete  or 
angular  closely  tomentose  branches.  Leaves  oval-elliptical  or  oblong,  very 
obtuse,  2 to  3in.  long,  glabrous  or  pubescent  above,  silky-pubescent,  tomentose  or 
villous  underneath,  the  petiole  from  J to  Jin.  long,  more  or  less  distinctly  articu- 
late or  geniculate  above  the  middle.  Flowers  yellow,  rather  numerous,  in  terminal 
racemes,  variable  in  size.  Bracts  small  and  narrow.  Calyx  about  3 to  3|  lines 
long,  the  lobes  all  acuminate,  nearly  equal  and  scarcely  longer  than  the  tube. 
Standard  6 to  8 lines  diameter,  glabrous.  Ovary  sessile,  pubescent  or  villous, 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS.E. 


375 


Crotalaria .] 

with  15  to  20  ovules  or  even  more.  Pod  1 to  l£in.  long,  tomentose-pubescent,  or 
at  length  nearly  glabrous. — C.  oblonyi folia.  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  under  n.  830  ; C. 
Mitchelii,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  50,  not  of  Benth. 

Hab..  Gulf  of  Carpentaria  to  Brisbane  Biver. 

The  species  contains  the  3 following  rather  marked  forms : — 

a.  parvijUyra.  Leaves  glabrous  above.  Flowers  small.  Pod  oblong,  about  fin.  long. 

b.  oblongifolia.  Leaves  glabrous  above  or  slightly  pubescent.  Flowers  rather  large.  Pod 
above  lin.  long,  much  inflated. 

c.  lasiophylla.  Leaves  softly  pubescent  on  both  sides.  Flowers  rather  large.  Bracts  closely 
reflexed. — Benth. 

11.  C.  crassipes  (stalks  thick),  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  830;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
182.  Apparently  a tall  and  erect  plant,  closely  allied  to  C.  Novce-Hollanilice,  with 
the  same  oblong  or  elliptical  obtuse  leaves  on  articulate  or  geniculate  petioles, 
but  the  whole  plant  is  perfectly  glabrous,  and  the  subulate  stipules  and  the  back 
of  the  petiole  are  continued  below  the  insertion  of  the  leaf  into  raised  angles 
shortly  decurrent  on  the  stem.  The  inflorescence  is  that  of  C.  Novce-Hollanilice, 
the  flowers  rather  larger  and  the  calyx-lobes  rather  longer.  The  ovary  is  as 
glabrous  as  the  rest  of  the  plant. 

The  Flora  Australiensis  description  is  given  because  I have  had  fragmentary  specimens  from 
northern  Queensland  which  I considered  might  probably  belong  to  this  species. 

12.  C.  Cunninghamii  (after  Allan  Cunningham),  Ii.  Br.  in  App.  Sturt 
Exped.  8 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  182.  A shrub  of  2 to  3ft.  (F.  v.  M.,  Fragm.  ix. 
156,  says  it  attains  the  height  in  some  localities  of  20ft.  and  also  that  the  leaves 
are  sometimes  trifoliolate),  with  softly  tomentose  terete  or  slightly  angular 
branches.  Leaves  ovate,  usually  broad,  very  obtuse,  14  to  3in.  long,  densely  and 
softly  tomentose-pubescent  or  villous  on  both  sides,  the  petiole  £ to  fin.  long, 
articulate  or  geniculate  above  the  middle.  Stipules  and  bracts  softly  subulate, 
sometimes  rather  long,  but  very  deciduous.  Racemes  terminal,  usually  short  and 
dense,  sometimes  reduced  to  a sessile  cluster,  rarely  4 to  5in.  long.  Flowers  very 
large,  of  a yellowish-green  colour,  more  or  less  streaked  with  dark  lines.  Calyx 
tomentose,  the  tube  about  3 lines  long,  the  lobes  varying  from  that  length  to 
twice  as  long,  all  nearly  equal.  Standard  ovate,  acuminate,  about  l|in.  long 
when  fully  developed ; keel  rather  longer ; wings  shorter.  Ovary  shortly  stipi- 
tate,  villous,  with  20  or  more  ovules.  Pod  coriaceous,  tomentose,  14in.  long. — 
Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  829 ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  52. 

Hab  : The  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller,  Leichhardt,  and  many  other  parts  of  tropical 
Queensland. 

13.  C.  trifoliastrum  (leaves  3-foliolate),  Willd.;  W.  and  Am.  Prod.  191  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  183.  A perennial  with  rather  slender  erect  ascending  or 
decumbent  branching  stems,  usually  1 to  2ft.  high,  more  or  less  pubescent. 
Leaflets  3,  usually  oblong-cuneate,  but  varying  from  obovate  and  under  |in.  long 
to  linear-cuneate  and  about  lin.  long,  very  obtuse  or  retuse,  glabrous  above,  hoary 
or  pubescent  underneath,  the  petiole  slender.  Flowers  usually  small,  but  variable 
in  size,  in  terminal  racemes  of  1 to  3in.  Calyx  pubescent,  about  2 lines  long,  the 
lobes  narrow  and  much  longer  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  rather  smaller 
than  the  others.  Standard  broad,  exceeding  the  calyx,  but  usually  shorter  than 
the  straight  beak  of  the  keel.  Ovary  sessile,  pubescent,  with  2 ovules.  Pod 
about  2 lines  broad  and  not  longer,  tapering  into  a short  hooked  point,  pubescent 
or  nearly  glabrous.— Wight,  Ic.  t.  421. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown,  Henne ; Shoalwater  Bay,  R.  Brown  ; 
Wide  Bay,  Bidwill ; Port  Curtis,  M'Gillivray ; Rockhampton,  Thozet,  Dallachy  ; Port  Denison, 
Fitzalan. 

F.  v.  Mueller,  Fragm.  iii.  5G  and  ix.  157,  unites  this  with  C.  medicaginea,  Lam.,  but  the  latter 
appears  to  be  always  prostrate,  with  small  broad  leaflets,  unless  when  drawn  up  in  luxuriant 

Pari  II.  Ii 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


,376 


[Crotalaria. 


grass,  the  racemes  much  shorter,  the  flowers  smaller,  the  standard  larger  in  proportion  to  the 
keel,  &c. — Benth. 

F.  v.  Mueller’s  herbarium  contains  also  a single  imperfect  specimen  from  the  Gulf  of  Carpen- 
taria, Landsborough,  allied  to  C.  trifoliastrum,  but  evidently  shrubby,  with  woolly  tomentose 
branches  and  larger  flowers,  closely  resembling  C.  Notonii,  W.  and  Am.  Prod.  ii.  192  (the  same 
as  C.  rostrata,  W.  and  Am.  l.c.  191),  but  the  materials  are  insufficient  for  ascertaining  whether 
it  be  a distinct  species. — Benth. 


14.  C.  incana  (hoary),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  132  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  188. 
An  erect  herb,  usually  annual,  attaining  2 or  8ft.,  the  branches  tomentose, 
pubescent  or  rusty-villous.  Leaflets  3,  obovate  or  orbicular,  very  obtuse,  usually 
L to  lin.  long,  glabrous  above,  more  or  less  ciliate  on  the  edge  and  sometimes 
hairy  underneath,  on  a long  common  petiole.  Flowers  small,  yellow,  in  short 
terminal  or  leaf-opposed  racemes.  Calyx  8 to  4 lines  long  or  rarely  rather  more, 
the  lobes  finely  acuminate,  several  times  longer  than  the  small  tube.  Standard 
as  long  as  or  rather  longer  than  the  calyx,  broad,  but  almost  acuminate  ; wings 
narrow  ; keel  nearly  as  long  as  the  standard  ; anthers  smaller  than  in  most 
species  and  rather  less  disproportioned.  Ovary  sessile,  villous,  with  numerous 
densely  crowded  ovules.  Pod  sessile,  1 to  ljin.  long,  usually  much  inflated  and 
hirsute  with  spreading  hairs. — Benth.  in  Mart.  FI.  Bras.  "Leg.  27 ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm. 
iii.  53  ; C.  affinis,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  132  ; C.  herhacea,  Schweigg.  in  Schranck,  Syll. 
PI.  Ratisb.  ii.  77;  C.  cubetisis,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  131;  C.  Schimperi,  A.  Rich.  FI. 
Abyss,  i.  151. 

Hab.:  Keppel  Bay,  B.  Brou  n ; Moreton  Island  and  Gilbert  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Rockhampton 
and  Bowen  River,  Bowman,  Dallachy ; common  at  Sandgate. 

The  species  is  widely  dispersed  over  the  tropical  and  subtropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the 
Old  World. 

15.  C.  dissitiflora  (flowers  scattered),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  386,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  184.  An  erect  perennial,  of  1 to  2ft.,  the  branches  hoary  or  silky- 
tomentose.  Leaflets  usually  3,  broadly  obovate,  oblong,  or  rarely  almost  linear, 
very  obtuse,  rarely  above  lin.  long,  and  often  much  smaller,  usually  glabrous 
above  and  hoary-tomentose  or  silky  underneath,  rarely  glabrous  or  villous  on  both 
sides.  Flowers  yellow,  in  a rather  loose  terminal  raceme,  often  elongating  to  5 
or  6in.  Calyx  2 to  3 lines  long,  the  lobes  rarely  longer  than  the  tube,  and  all 
nearly  equal.  Standard  broad,  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx;  keel  rather  shorter. 
Ovary  shortly  stipitate,  more  or  less  pubescent  or  villous,  with  10  to  12  ovules. 
Pod  pubescent,  tomentose,  or  nearly  glabrous. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Landsborough:  Balonne  River,  Mitchell;  Suttor  River,  F.  v. 
Mueller;  Broadsound,  Bowman;  Rockhampton,  Thozet,  Dallachy ; heads  of  the  Isaacs  and 
Bowen  Rivers,  Bowman.  The  varieties  are  met  with  towards  Cooper’s  Creek. 

Yar.  erevuea.  Leaflets  narrow,  the  lateral  ones  often  small  or  wanting,  softly  tomentose, 
hoary  or  white. 

Var.  rugosa.  Leaves  soft,  silky-villous  on  both  sides.  Flowers  small. 


16.  C.  Striata  (streaked  flowers),  DC.;  J.  G.  Baker  in  Hook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind. 
ii.  84.  Stem  1 to  3ft.  high,  erect,  the  young  branches  slightly  silky-hairy. 
Stipules  small,  setaceous,  deciduous.  Petioles  1J  to  3in.  long.  Leaflets  3,  oblong 
or  obovate-oblong,  shortly  stalked,  the  central  one  2 or  3in.  long,  1 to  1 Jin.  broad, 
blunt  with  a minute  point,  greenish  on  both  sides,  at  first  silky  on  the  under  side. 
Flowers  in  terminal  racemes  of  6 to  9in.  Bracts  setaceous,  deciduous,  silky,  2 
or  3 lines  long.  Pedicels  1 to  1J  line  long,  finely  silky.  Calyx  Jin.  long,  teeth 
lanceolate-acuminate,  equalling  the  tube.  Corolla  bright-yellow,  marked  with 
dark  lines,  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Pod  linear,  distinctly  stalked,  1 to  ljin. 
long,  2J  to  3 lines  broad,  glabrescent,  seeds  about  20. — Bot.  Mag.  t.  8200. 


Hab.:  Common  in  the  Brisbane  district. 


Crotalaria.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSvE. 


377 


17.  C.  laburnifolia  (Laburnum-leaved),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  130;  Benth. 
LI.  Austr.  ii.  184.  An  erect  glabrous  shrub  of  several  feet,  with  rather  slender 
terete  branches.  Leaflets  3,  petiolulate,  ovate,  mostly  acute,  1 to  2in.  long,  on  a 
rather  long  common  petiole.  Flowers  large,  yellow,  in  loose  terminal  or  leaf- 
opposed  racemes.  Calyx  5 to  6 lines  long,  the  lobes  acuminate,  much  longer  than 
the  broad  tube.  Standard  broadly  ovate,  shortly  acuminate,  fully  fin.  long ; 
wings  not  half  so  long,  broad,  with  the  transverse  folds  particularly  prominent ; 
keel  with  a long  straight  beak,  as  long  as  the  standard.  Ovary  on  a long  stipes, 
glabrous,  with  20  to  30  or  more  ovules.  Pod  ljin.  long  or  more,  on  a stipes 
much  longer  than  the  calyx. — Rheede  Hort.  Mai.  ix.  27 ; W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  193; 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  53. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay ; Cape  Cleveland,  A.  Cunningham;  Cape  Upstart,  ALGillivray ; sandy 
shores  of  the  Burdekin,  Dawson  and  Burnett  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Port  Denison,  Fitzalan ; 
Burdekin  and  Bowen  Rivers,  Bowman. 

The  species  is  common  on  the  sandy  coasts  of  East  India. — Benth. 

18.  C.  quinquefolia  (five-foliolate),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  135  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  184.  An  erect  annual,  attaining  3 or  4ft.,  with  a hollow  stem,  glabrous 
or  silky-pubescent.  Leaflets  from  3 to  7,  usually  5,  lanceolate  or  linear,  obtuse, 
1^  to  3in.  long  or  the  central  one  longer,  almost  sessile  on  a rather  long  common 
petiole.  Flowers  large,  yellow,  in  loose  terminal  or  leaf-opposed  racemes.  Bracts 
lanceolate,  acuminate,  reflexed.  Calyx  5 to  6 lines  long,  the  lobes  broad,  acumi- 
nate, scarcely  longer  than  the  tube.  Standard  broad,  very  obtuse,  about  fin. 
diameter  ; wings  rather  shorter  ; keel  with  an  acute  curved  beak.  Pod  glabrous, 
about  2in.  long,  on  a stipes  equal  to  or  longer  than  the  calyx. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod. 
194  ; Rheede  Hort.  Mai.  ix.  t.  28. 

Hab.:  On  the  lower  Burdekin  River,  Bowman. 

The  species  is  generally  dispersed  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago. 

23.  *LUPINUS,  Linn. 

(Said  to  be  derived  from  lupus,  a wolf ; on  account  of  the  plant  being  supposed  to 
destroy  the  fertility  of  the  soil.) 

Calyx  deeply  2-lipped,  upper  lip  entire  or  emarginate,  lower  slightly  3-toothed. 
Standard  ovate,  wings  large,  oblong,  including  the  small  upcurved  rostrate  keel. 
Stamens  united  in  a close  tube.  Ovary  sessile,  ovules  many.  Style  slender, 
upcurved,  glabrous.  Stigma  capitate,  ciliate.  Pod  compressed,  silky,  septate 
between  the  seeds,  2-valved. 

A large  genus  almost  entirely  American. 

Now  and  again  one  or  more  species  of  this  genus  is  met  with  as  a stray  from  garden  culture. 


24.  TRIGONELLA,  Linn. 

(Flowers  triangular.) 

Calyx-teeth  nearly  equal.  Petals  free  from  the  staminal  tube ; standard 
obovate  or  oblong,  narrowed  at  the  base  but  scarcely  clawed  ; wings  and  keel 
shorter,  obtuse.  Upper  stamen  free  or  at  first  united  with  the  others ; filaments 
not  dilated ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile  or  shortly  stipitate,  with  several 
ovules  ; style  filiform.  Pod  either  linear  straight  or  curved,  or  in  species  not 
Australian  flat  and  falcate,  or  short  with  a long  beak,  2-valved  or  indehiscent. 
Seeds  not  strophiolate. — Herbs,  often  strong-scented.  Leaves  pinnately  3- 
foliolate,  the  leaflets  usually  denticulate.  Stipules  adnate  to  the  petiole.  Flowers 
yellow,  white  or  blue,  in  axillary  heads,  umbels,  or  short  racemes. 

The  genus  is  rather  numerous  in  species  in  the  warmer  extratropical  regions  of  the  northern 
hemisphere  in  the  Old  World,  one  of  the  common  ones  being  also  found  in  South  Africa.  The 
only  Australian  species  is  very  nearly  allied  to  an  Egyptian  one,  although  not  quite  identical 
with  any  form  hitherto  observed  there. — Benth. 


878 


XLITT.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Trigonella. 


1.  T.  suavissima  (very  sweet-scented),  Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Three  Exped.  i.  255  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  187.  An  annual,  either  quite  glabrous  or  sprinkled  with  a 
few  hairs  on  the  under  side  of  the  leaves  and  on  the  calyxes,  the  stems  prostrate 
or  ascending,  from  f to  2 or  3ft.  in  length.  Leaflets  broadly  obovate  or  obcordate, 
rarely  above  fin.  long,  more  or  less  denticulate,  on  a long  slender  petiole. 
Stipules  semisagittate,  deeply  toothed.  Flowers  small,  yellow,  in  sessile  clusters. 
Calyx  about  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  lanceolate-subulate,  rather  rigid,  fully  as  long 
as  the  tube.  Standard  longer  than  the  calyx ; wings  and  keel  scarcely  shorter. 
Upper  stamen  free.  Pod  linear,  curved,  almost  obtuse,  f to  fin.  long,  and  about 
1 line  broad,  opening  in  2 thin  reticulate  valves,  either  flat  or  undulate. 

Hab.:  Georgina  River,  J.  Coghlan.  Flowering  about  August. 

Used  by  Sir  T.  Mitchell  as  a vegetable. 

The  species  is  closely  allied  to  T.  hamosa  of  the  northern  hemisphere,  which  is  also  found  in 
S.  Africa,  and  to  the  E.  Mediterranean  T.  microcar  pa,  Poir.,  and  T.  anguina,  Delile,  but  not  quite 
identical  with  either.—  Benth. 


25.  *MEDICAGO,  Linn. 

(A  native  of  the  country  of  the  Medes.) 

Calyx-tube  short,  with  5 subequal  teeth.  Corolla  caducous  ; petals  free  from 
the  staminal  tube  ; standard  obovate  ; keel  short,  obtuse.  Stamens  diadelphous  ; 
filaments  not  dilated ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile,  usually  multiovulate. 
Style  subulate,  glabrous ; stigma  oblique.  Pod  usually  many  times  spirally 
twisted,  often  muricate. — Herbs,  often  annual,  with  pinnately  trifoliolate  leaves. 

A considerable  genus,  with  its  headquarters  round  the  Mediterranean. — J.  G.  Baker. 

Plant  annual 1 . M.  denticulata. 

Plant  perennial 2.  M.  sativa. 

1.  IVE.  denticulata  (toothed),  Willd.  Annual  with  procumbent  stems,  often 
If  to  2ft.  long  and  numerous,  subglabrous.  Stipules  laciniated,  the  free  points 
linear.  Leaflets  obovate-cuneate,  toothed.  Peduncles  lin.  long,  the  flowers  in 
heads  3 to  6.  Pedicels  shorter  than  the  calyx,  which  is  1 line  long,  teeth 
lanceolate-subulate.  Corolla  yellow,  half  as  long  again  as  the  calyx.  Pod 
glabrous,  globose,  fin.  broad  without  the  spines,  with  2 to  4 spirals,  the  faces 
reticulate  with  raised  veins,  the  spines  straight,  about  f line  long. 

Hab.:  Europe.  A common  weed  of  many  warm  countries. 

2.  IVE.  sativa  (cultivated),  Linn.  The  cultivated  Lucern.  A perennial  with 
ascending  or  erect  stems  of  1 or  2ft.  Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate.  Peduncles 
axillary,  bearing  a short  close  raceme  of  violet  or  blue  flowers.  Upper  stamen 
free.  Pod  spirally  twisted  so  as  to  form  2 or  rarely  3 complete  coils,  without 
tubercles  or  prickles. 

Hab.:  This  excellent  fodder  plant  is  now  and  again  met  with  as  a stray  from  cultivation. 

Sometimes  old  fields  of  this  fodder  may  be  seen  much  infested  with  Lcestadia  destructiva. 

26.  *MELILOTUS,  Juss. 

(From  met,  honey,  and  Lotus.) 

Calyx  with  a campanulate  tube  and  5 subequal  teeth.  Corolla  caducous,  not 
adhering  to  the  staminal  tube ; standard  obovate-oblong  ; wings  oblong  ; keel 
blunt,  often  shorter  than  the  wings.  Stamens  diadelphous ; filaments  not 
dilated  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate.  Pod  subglobose  or  ovoid, 
subindehiscent,  1 or  2-seeded. — Annuals  or  biennials,  with  pinnately  trifoliolate 
leaves  with  toothed  leaflets  and  flowers  in  stalked  racemes. 

A moderately  small  genus  with  its  headquarters  in  Europe. — J.  G.  Baker. 

Annual.  Corolla  pale-yellow,  minute ; standard  exceeding  wings  and  keel. 


Pod  glabrous 1.  M.  parviflora. 

Biennial.  Corolla  white ; standard  exceeding  wings  and  keel.  Pod  glabrous  . 2.  M.  alba. 


Melilotus.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSrE. 


379 


1.  1VE.  parviflora  (small-flowered),  Desf.  Small-flowered  Melilot.  Stems 
slender,  1 to  l^f't.  high.  Stipules  linear-acuminate.  Leaflets  obovate  or 
oblanceolate,  retuse  or  emarginate.  Flowering  racemes  close ; fruiting  racemes 
1 to  2in.  Calyx  about  ^ line,  teeth  deltoid.  Corolla  about  1 line  long.  Pod  1 
to  1^  line,  obscurely  reticulate-lacunose,  usually  1-seeded. 

Hab.:  Very  common  on  low-lying  land  in  the  interior  of  Queensland. 

2.  alba  (white),  Lam.  White  Melilot.  A taller  and  more  robust  plant 
than  M.  parviflora.  Stipules  and  leaflets  similar.  Racemes  in  flower  about  2in., 
in  fruit  4in.  long.  Calyx  scarcely  1 line,  the  teeth  lanceolate,  shorter  than  the 
tube.  Corolla  always  white,  inodorous,  2 or  8 times  the  length  of  the  calyx, 
sometimes  scarcely  larger  than  in  M.  parviflora.  Pod  2-seeded,  rather  larger 
than  the  last. 

Hab.:  A European  plant  sometimes  met  with  in  the  cultivation  paddocks  of  the  Darling  Downs. 


27.  -TRIFOLIUM,  Linn. 


(Referring  to  the  leaves  usually  being  composed  of  three  leaflets.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate ; teeth  mostly  5,  subequal.  Corolla  adnate  to  the 
staminal  tube  and  fading  without  falling  ; standard  and  wings  narrow ; keel 
straight,  obtuse.  Stamens  diadelphous  ; filaments  more  or  less  dilated  ; anthers 
uniform.  Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate  ; ovules  few.  Style  filiform,  incurved  above 
the  base  ; stigma  oblique.  Pod  minute,  included,  membranous,  indehiscent,  1 or 
few'-seeded. — Annual  or  perennial  herbs.  Leaves  with  stipules  adnate  to  the 
petiole  and  digitately  3-foliolate  leaflets.  Flowers  small,  copious,  in  dense 
axillary  heads. 

Species  numerous,  mostly  European  and  Oriental,  American,  and  African.  Often  spread  by 
cultivation,  there  being  many  excellent  fodders  amongst  them. 


Calyx  inflated  after  flowering  ; standard  turned  outward 1.  T.  resupimita. 

Flowers  usually  10  to  20  in  the  head,  sessile  or  on  very  short  pedicels  ...  2 . T.  procumbens. 

Flowers  pedicellate  in  the  head,  reflexed  after  flowering 3.  T.  repens. 


1.  T.  resupinata  (resupinate),  Linn.  The  Reversed  Clover.  A glabrous 
annual  with  numerous  stems,  leafy  and  tufted  at  the  base,  lengthened  out  to  a 
foot  or  more.  Stipules  rather  broad,  with  narrow  points.  Flower-heads  small, 
on  axillary  peduncles.  Calyx  glabrous  or  hairy  on  the  upper  side  only  ; the  teeth 
short,  but  after  flowering  the  upper  part  becomes  very  much  inflated,  arched, 
membranous  and  veined,  with  the  2 upper  teeth  at  the  top,  the  3 lower  ones 
remaining  at  the  base  of  the  inflated  part.  Corolla  small,  pink ; the  standard 
turned  outwards  instead  of  inwards,  as  in  other  Clovers. — Benth. 

Hab.:  Europe.  Naturalised  about  Brisbane. 


2.  T.  procumbens  (procumbent),  Linn.  The  Lesser  Clover.  Annual,  often 
only  a few  inches  high,  sometimes  attaining  1ft.  Stipules  half-adnate,  the 
points  deltoid-acuminate.  Petioles  equalling  the  obovale-cuneate  leaflets,  which 
are  about  Mn.  long,  the  central  one  stalked.  Flowers  in  dense,  round,  stalked 
heads  of  10  or  more.  Calyx  pedicellate,  % line  long,  3 lower  teeth  lanceolate, 
reaching  half-way  down,  the  2 upper  ones  much  broader  and  shorter.  Corolla 
2 lines  long,  bright-yellow  ; the  standard  finally  becoming  2 lines  broad,  flat, 
spoon-shaped,  strongly  veined,  folded  over  the  stalked,  exserted,  1-seeded  pod. 

Hab.:  Europe.  Naturalised  about  southern  townships. 

3.  T.  repens  (plant  creeping),  Linn.  Dutch  or  White  Clover.  A glabrous 
or  slightly  hairy  perennial,  the  stems  creeping  and  rooting  at  the  nodes.  Stipules 
small.  Leaflets  obovate,  distinctly  toothed,  and  usually  bearing  a mark  in  the 
centre  which  has  been  compared  to  a horseshoe,  the  leafstalk  often  very  long. 


380 


XLI1I.  LEGUM1N0S/E. 


[. Trifotium . 


Peduncles  axillary,  long  and  erect,  bearing  a globular  head,  or  rather  umbel,  of 
white  flowers  often  tinged  with  pink  ; the  pedicels  after  flowering  more  or  less 
elongated  and  recurved.  Calyx-teeth  scarcely  so  long  as  the  tube,  the  lowest  one 
usually  the  shortest.  Pod  containing  2 to  4 seeds,  usually  protruding  from  the 
calyx,  but  enclosed  in  the  withered  corolla. — Benth. 

Hab.:  Europe.  This  excellent  pasture  plant  is  often  met  with  in  the  southern  parts  of  the 
colony  as  a stray  from  cultivation. 


28.  LOTUS,  Linn. 

(Derivation  unknown.) 

Calyx-lobes  nearly  equal  or  the  lowest  longer.  Standard  obovate  or  orbicular; 
keel  much  incurved,  beaked.  Upper  stamens  free,  the  rest  united  in  a sheath  ; 
filaments  above  the  sheath,  alternately  dilated  near  the  top;  anthers  uniform. 
Ovary  sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; style  bent  above  the  ovary,  glabrous,  with  a 
terminal  stigma.  Pod  usually  linear,  terete,  with  cellular  partitions  between  the 
seeds.  Seeds  not  strophiolate. — Herbs  or,  in  species  not  Australian,  undershrubs. 
Leaves  of  4 or  5 leaflets,  3 almost  digitate  at  the  end  of  the  petiole,  1 or  2 close 
to  the  stem,  taking  the  place  of  stipules.  Real  stipules  reduced  to  minute 
tubercles  or  dark  spots,  or  entirely  wanting.  Flowers  yellow,  pink  or  white, 
usually  several  together  in  an  umbel,  on  an  axillary  peduncle,  with  a leaf-like 
bract  under  the  umbel. 

The  genus  is  widely  spread  over  the  temperate  regions  of  the  northern  hemisphere  in  the  Old 
World,  the  mountains  of  tropical  Asia,  and  extratropical  South  Africa. — Benth. 

1.  Z>.  australis  (Australian),  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  624;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
188.  A perennial,  sometimes  almost  shrubby  at  the  base,  with  diffuse  ascending 
or  erect  stems,  either  glabrous  and  glaucous  or  more  frequently  pubescent  on  the 
younger  branches  and  peduncles,  and  in  some  specimens  softly  villous  all  over. 
Leaflets  5,  from  obovate  and  about  ^in.  long  to  linear  and  over  lin.  long. 
Flowers  few  or  many,  usually  pink  and  fragrant,  but  varying  much  in  colour, 
from  white  to  purple.  Calyx-lobes  usually  longer  than  the  tube.  Pod  cylindrical, 
1 to  l^in.  long.  Ser.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  212  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  1365  ; Hook.  f.  FI. 
Tasm.  i.  98  ; L.  lavigatus,  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  62  ; L.  albidus,  Lodd. 
Bot.  Cab.  t.  1063;  Maund,  Botanist,  t.  211. 

Hab.:  Keppel  Bay,  B.  Brown  ; Port  Curtis , M‘ Gillivraij  ; Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham;  near 
Mount  Faraday,  Mitchell;  Edgecombe  Bay,  Rockhampton,  &c.,  Dallachy  ; a common  inland 
plant  in  the  southern  parts  of  the  colony. 

The  flowers  are  neither  as  large  nor  as  fragrant  as  in  the  southern  colonies. 

The  plant  has  the  reputation  of  being  poisonous  to  stock. 

Var.  parviflorus.  Leaves  small,  usually  broad.  Flowers  often  solitary  or  only  2 or  3 
together  on  the  peduncle,  very  much  smaller,  and  often  but  not  always  deeply  coloured,  the 
calyx-lobes  very  fine  and  scarcely  so  long  in  proportion  to  the  tube  as  usual  in  L.  australis. 
Hab.:  Inland  localities. 


29.  PSORALEA,  Linn. 

(From  psoral cos,  scurfy,  in  allusion  to  the  hairs  on  the  calyx.) 

(Meladenia,  Turcz.) 

Calyx-lobes  nearly  equal  or  the  lowest  the  largest,  or  the  2 upper  ones  united. 
Standard  ovate  or  orbicular  ; wings  slightly  adhering  to  the  keel,  which  is  slightly 
incurved,  obtuse,  and  shorter  than  the  other  petals.  Upper  stamen  free  or  more 
or  less  adhering  to  the  others  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  with  a single  ovule ; 
style  filiform  or  dilated  at  the  base.  Pod  small,  ovate,  not  dehiscent,  the 
pericarp  usually  adhering  to  the  seed. — Herbs,  undershrubs,  or  rarely  shrubs, 
dotted  with  black  or  transparent  glands.  Leaves  of  3,  5,  or  7 digitate  entire 


Psoralea.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


381 


leaflets,  or  of  1 or  3 pinnately-arranged  entire  or  toothed  leaflets,  or  in  species 
not  Australian  pinnate  with  several  leaflets.  Stipules  attached  by  a broad 
base.  Flowers  purple,  pink,  blue  or  white,  usually  small,  and  in  the  Australian 
species  in  axillary  spikes  or  racemes.  Bracts  membranous,  deciduous,  each  usually 
with  2 or  3 flowers  in  its  axil. 

A large  genus,  widely  distributed  over  various  parts  of  the  globe,  but  most  abundant  in  S. 


Africa  and  N.  America. 

Leaves  all  1-foliolate.  Leaflets  entire  or  toothed. 

Calyx  lower  lobe  much  longer  than  the  others. 

Plant  softly  pubescent  or  silky-villous.  Stipules  subulate.  Leaflets 

entire 1 . P.  badocana. 

Plant  velvety.  Stipules  broad,  triangular 2.  P.  cephalantha. 

Plant  hispid.  Leaflets  toothed 3.  P.  Archeri. 

Calyx-lobes  nearly  equal  in  length.  Plant  very  dark  and  rough,  with 
glandular  dots,  glabrous  or  slightly  hoary.  Flowers  small,  in  loose 

elongated  racemes 9.  P.  leucantha. 

Leaves  all  pinnately  3-foliolate,  or  the  lower  ones  rarely  1-foliolate. 

Calyx  lower  lobe  much  longer  than  the  lateral  ones.  Leaflets  entire. 

Flowers  in  dense  heads.  Calyx  very  hispid,  the  lower  lobe  long- 

lanceolate.  Petals  shorter  than  the  calyx 4.  P.  plumosa. 

Flowers  in  interrupted  spikes.  Petals  longer  than  the  calyx.  Calyx 

pubescent  . 5.  P.  pustulata. 


Calyx  lower  lobe  scarcely  exceeding  the  upper  ones.  Leaflets  usually 
toothed. 

Calyx  softly  silky-villous  or  black,  2 to  4 lines  long,  completely  con- 
cealing the  pod. 

Calyx  3 to  4 lines  long,  the  lateral  lobes  short.  Plant  usually  white- 


tomentose 6.  P.  eriantha. 

Calyx  about  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  nearly  equal.  Plant  hoary  or 

pubescent 7.  P.  patens. 

Calyx  hoary- tomentose  or  slightly  pubescent,  1 to  line  long,  open 
when  in  fruit,  and  scarcely  exceeding  or  shorter  than  the  pod. 

Leaflets  ovate  or  elliptical,  mostly  § to  lin.  long 8.  P.  cincrea. 

Leaflets  oblong  or  lanceolate,  1J  to  3in.  long 9.  P.  leucantha. 

Leaves  digitately  3 to  7-foliolate.  Leaflets  entire.  Racemes  slender.  Calyx 

1 to  1J  line  long,  slightly  pubescent,  about  as  long  as  the  pod 10.  P.  tenax. 

Leaves  3-foliolate.  Leaflets  obovate  on  very  short  petiolules,  quite  entire. 

Flowers  purple 11.  P.  Testarice. 


1.  P.  badocana  (a  Philippine  name),  Benth.  Fi.  Auxtr.  ii.  190.  “ A-ma-ga,” 
Moreheacl  River,  Roth.  An  erect  stout  undershrub  or  shrub  of  2 to  3ft.,  softly 
tomentose  or  silky-villous  all  over  and  strongly  scented,  the  black  dots  mostly 
concealed  by  the  indumentum.  Leaflet  single,  on  a petiole  articulate  near  the 
top,  ovate  to  lanceolate,  obtuse  or  scarcely  acute,  2 to  3in.  long,  entire,  softly 
villous  on  both  sides  and  usually  silky  underneath.  Stipules  linear-subulate, 
often  |in.  long.  Flowers  in  dense  heads  or  short  spikes,  all  axillary  or  sessile  or 
very  shortly  pedunculate.  Calyx  softly  villous,  fully  5 lines  long  in  the  normal 
forms,  including  the  lower  lobe,  which  is  much  longer  than  the  others  and  boat- 
shaped.  Petals  shorter  than  the  lower  calyx-lobe.  Pod  small,  reticulate, 
glandular. — Liparia  badocana,  Blanco,  FI.  Filip.  597  ; Melailenia  densiflora,  Turcz. 
in  Bull.  Mosc.  1848,  i.  576. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown  ; Morehead  River,  Roth. 

Roots  eaten,  Roth,  l c. 

2.  P.  cephalantha  (flowers  in  heads),  F.  r.  M.  Fraym.  iv.  35  A shrub 
with  velvety-tomentose  branches.  Stipules  broad,  triangular,  very  shortly 
acuminate.  Leaves  simple,  ovate  or  oblong-lanceolate,  acute,  quite  entire,  shortly 
tomentose  pubescent,  1^  to  2£in.  long.  Spikes  or  flowerheads  globular.  Calyx 
rather  smaller  than  in  P.  badocana,  the  lowest  scarcely  as  long  as  the  petals. 
Petals  bluish.  Pods  not  seen  in  the  ripe  state. — Benth  l.c.  as  a (?)  var.  of 
P.  badocana. 

Hab.:  Mt.  Elliott,  J.  Dallachy  and  E.  FiUalan  (F.  v.  M.,  l.c.) 


382 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[ Psoralea . 


3.  P.  Archeri  (after  Wm.  Archer),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  21  (partly)  ; Benth. 
FI.  Anstr.  ii.  190.  “Wommo,”  Cloncurry,  Palmer.  Very  nearly  allied  to 
P.  badocana,  with  which  F.  v.  Mueller  unites  it,  but  apparently  an  erect  coarse 
annual  of  1 to  2ft.,  hirsute  with  much  more  rigid  and  spreading  hairs  than  in 
that  species.  Leaves  similarly  1-foliolate,  the  leaflet  ovate  or  oblong,  obtuse,  2 
to  3in.  long,  but  always  toothed.  Flower-heads  sessile  and  very  hispid.  Flowers 
of  P.  badocana , but  the  calyx-lobes  more  subulate.  Pod  ovate,  almost  acute, 
very  hispid. 

Hab.:  Gulf  country. 

Used  for  fibre.  The  plant  is  pulled,  soaked  some  hours  in  water,  then  left  to  dry,  when 'the 
bark  peels  and  is  kept  for  use  for  cordage  and  strong  twine. — Palmer. 

4.  P.  plumosa  (feathery),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  22  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  191. 
Apparently  an  annual,  erect,  nearly  simple,  6 to  9in.  high,  very  hispid  with  long 
spreading  rigid  hairs.  Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate  ; leaflets  obovate  or  elliptical, 
acute  or  mucronulate,  quite  entire,  f to  lin.  long,  the  lateral  veins  few.  Flower- 
spikes  dense,  short,  shortly  pedunculate,  very  hispid.  Bracts  broad.  Calyx-tube 
very  short,  the  lowest  lobe  lanceolate,  acuminate,  nearly  4 lines  long,  the  upper 
ones  scarcely  half  as  long  and  narrow.  Petals  shorter  than  the  lower  calyx-lobe  ; 
keel  with  a short  erect  point.  Pod  ovate,  slightly  hirsute. 

Hab.:  Gulf  country. 

5.  P.  pustulata  (blistered),  F.  v.  M.  in  Tram.  Viet.  Inst.  iii.  54  ; Benth.  FI- 
Austr.  ii.  191.  An  undershrub  with  stout  rigid  erect  branches  attaining  5 to 
10ft.  in  height,  loosely  pubescent  and  sprinkled  with  large  almost  scale-like 
glands.  Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate  ; leaflets  obovate  or  oblong,  very  obtuse, 
1 to  2in.  long,  entire,  softly  pubescent.  Stipules  broad,  rigid,  striate.  Flowers 
shortly  pedicellate,  in  rather  loose  axillary  racemes  of  2 to  4in.,  flowering  almost 
from  the  base.  Calyx  about  3 lines  long,  slightly  pubescent  and  sprinkled  with 
prominent  glands ; the  lobes  rather  broad,  the  4 upper  ones  very  short,  the  lowest 
nearly  twice  as  long.  Petals  half  as  long  again  as  the  calyx,  the  standard  rather 
broad.  Pod  enclosed  in  the  somewhat  inflated  calyx,  ovate-oblong,  slightly  hairy, 
very  glandular. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria. 

6.  P.  eriantha  (flowers  woolly),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Prop.  Austr.  131,  and  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  192.  A perennial  with  a woody  rhizome  and  prostrate  or  ascending 
stems  of  1 to  2ft.,  hoary  or  white  with  a short  or  soft  tomentum.  Leaves  pin- 
nately 3-foliolate  ; leaflets  ovate,  obovate  or  almost  orbicular,  toothed,  hoary  or 
white-tomentose,  the  terminal  one  usually  J to  lin.  or  rarely  1^-in.  long,  the 
lateral  ones  smaller.  Stipules  short.  Spikes  pedunculate,  sometimes  dense  and 
1 to  2in.  long,  more  frequently  rather  loose  and  2 to  3 or  even  4in.  long.  Flowers 
bluish,  almost  sessile.  Calyx  3 to  nearly  4 lines  long,  clothed  with  a soft  white 
tomentum  or  pubescence,  the  lowest  lobe  rather  longer  than  the  2 uppermost,  the 
lateral  ones  much  shorter.  Petals  rather  longer  than  the  calyx.  Pod  ovoid, 
obtuse,  tomentose  or  villous,  shorter  than  the  calyx. 

Hab.:  In  the  bed  of  the  Balonne  River,  near  St.  George’s  Bridge,  Mitchell. 

The  species  is  nearly  allied  to,  although  not  identical  with,  P.  Jaubertiana,  Fenzl,  from  the 
E.  Mediterranean  region. — Benth. 

7.  P.  patens  (spreading),  Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Three  Fxped.  ii.  9 ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  192.  A perennial  of  1 to  6ft.,  with  a woody  rhizome  and  erect  or  ascend- 
ing branches  hoary-tomentose  or  pubescent.  Leaves  pinnately  8-foliolate.  Leaflets 
from  ovate-rhomboid  to  broadly  lanceolate,  obtuse,  usually  rounded  at  the  base, 
mostly  1 to  1-^in.  long,  denticulate,  green  or  minutely  hoary-tomentose.  Spikes 
at  first  dense,  but  afterwards  elongated  and  interrupted,  on  very  long  peduncles. 


Psnralea.  J 


XLIII.  LBGUMINOSiE. 


388 


Flowers  nearly  sessile,  the  bracts  small.  Calyx  softly  silky  with  white  or  black 
hairs,  about  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  about  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  lowest  much 
broader  but  not  longer  than  the  others.  Standard  and  wings  half  as  long  again 
as  the  calyx  ; keel  shorter,  obtuse.  Pod  tomentose,  much  shorter  than  the  calyx. 
— P.  australasica,  Schlecht.  Linntea,  xx.  668. 

Hab.:  On  the  Burdekin  and  near  Port  Denison,  Bowman , Dallachy. 

This  plant,  P.  eriantha  and  P.  cinerea,  belong  to  the  same  group  as  P.  plicata,  Delile,  from 
Africa  and  the  E.  Mediterranean  region,  and  are  all  nearly  allied  to  that  species,  although  none 
are  quite  identical  with  it. — Benth. 

On  the  Georgina  the  natives  steep  the  stems  in  water  and  peel  off  the  bark,  which  they  make 
into  twine  for  nets,  &c. — J.  Coghlan. 

8.  P.  cinerea  (grey),  Ldndl.  in  Mitch.  Three  Exped.  ii.  65;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  192.  A perennial  with  ascending  or  erect  branching  stems  as  in  P. 
patens,  but  more  slender,  minutely  hoary  as  well  as  the  leaves.  Leaves  pinnately 
3-foliolate  ; leaflets  ovate  or  elliptical,  cuneate  at  the  base,  mostly  f to  1 or  l|4n. 
long,  mucronate  and  irregularly  denticulate.  Racemes  pedunculate,  slender, 
loose  and  much  longer  than  the  leaves.  Flowers  very  small,  shortly  pedicellate. 
Calyx  scarcely  above  1 line  long,  rather  open,  the  teeth  short,  broad,  and  nearly 
equal.  Petals  but  little  longer  than  the  calyx,  the  keel  very  obtuse.  Pod  about 
as  long  as  the  calyx,  slightly  hairy. — P.  Drummondii,  Meissn.  in  Bot.  Zeit. 
1855,  81. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Landsborough,  and  Darr  River. 


9.  P.  leucantha  (pale  or  white  flowers),  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  iii. 
54  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  193.  A tall  undershrub  or  shrub  with  spreading 
branches,  minutely  hoary-tomentose  or  glabrous.  Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate  or 
some  of  them  1-foliolate  ; leaflets  oblong  or  lanceolate,  mucronate  but  otherwise 
obtuse,  entire  or  bordered  by  small  crenatures  or  prominent  glands,  1\  to  3 or 
even  4in.  long,  hoary-tomentose  or  nearly  glabrous.  Flowers  fragrant,  small, 
white  with  a blue  keel,  pedicellate  in  rather  loose  pedunculate  racemes  of  2 to 
Sin.  or  sometimes  longer,  often  clustered  along  the  rhachis.  Calyx  about  1+  line 
long,  the  lobes  of  nearly  equal  length,  the  2 upper  ones  united,  the  lowest  broader 
than  the  others.  Petals  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx  ; standard  obovate  ; keel 
rather  shorter.  Pod  nearly  glabrous,  exceeding  the  calyx,  very  oblique  and  much 
wrinkled. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Landsborougli ; Bowen  River,  Bowman ; Bogie  River  and  Edge- 
combe Bay,  Dallachy ; Pioneer  River,  and  many  other  localities. 

10.  P.  tenax  (tough),  Ldndl.  in  Mitch.  Three  Exped.  ii.  10  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  193.  Emu  grass,  Darling  Downs.  A perennial  with  decumbent  or 
ascending  rather  slender  branching  stems  of  1 to  2ft.,  glabrous  or  minutely  pubes- 
cent with  appressed  hairs.  Leaves  digitately  3 to  7-foliolate  with  linear-lanceolate 
or  oblong-elliptical  acute  leaflets  of  f to  l^in.,  or  the  lower  leaves  with  3 broader 
and  more  obtuse  leaflets,  all  quite  entire,  glabrous  or  sprinkled  underneath  with 
a few  appressed  hairs.  Flowers  small,  blue  (or  purple  ?),  very  shortly  pedicellate 
in  dense  or  interrupted  racemes  of  1 to  4in.,  on  very  long  peduncles.  Calyx  1 to 
1%  line  long,  the  lobes  acute,  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  to  the 
middle,  the  lowest  one  broad.  Standard  usually  not  half  as  long  again  as  the 
calyx  ; keel  shorter,  obtuse.  Pod  ovoid,  black,  slightly  pubescent,  about  as  long 
as  the  open  fruiting  calyx. 

Hab.:  Dawson  River  and  Peak  Downs,  V.  v.  Mueller. 

Var.  (?)  major.  Leaves  all  3-foliolate  with  broader  leaflets.  Standard  nearly  twice  as  long  as 
the  calyx.  Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart. 


384 


XLIII.  LEGUMlNOSiE. 


[Psoralea 


11.  P.  Testariae  (after  Elizabeth  Testar),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  45.  A 
moderately  robust  plant ; branches  pubescent.  Stipules  semi-lanceolate,  subulate- 
acuminate,  4 to  8 lines  long,  1J  to  3 lines  broad  at  the  base,  thin-chartaceous, 
striate,  brown,  the  outer  side  and  margins  pubescent,  at  length  deciduous. 
Leaves  trifoliolate ; leaflets  obovate,  on  very  short  petiolules,  quite  entire, 
herbaceous,  1J  to  2in.  long,  thin  penninerved,  mucronulate,  the  under  side 
slightly  pubescent  and  glandular,  the  scurfy  brown  scales  scattered  and  minute, 
upper  side  almost  glabrous.  Stipellte  2 at  the  apex  of  the  petiole,  setaceous, 
scarcely  over  1 line  long.  Head  of  flowers  terminal,  sessile  or  on  short  peduncles. 
Bracts  4 to  5 lines  long,  2 to  3J  lines  broad,  imbricate,  encompassing  the  lower 
portion  of  the  flower  head,  appressed,  pubescent  on  both  sides.  Calyx  almost 
silky,  teeth  long.  Petals  purple,  lamina  of  standard  4 lines  long,  complicate- 
orbicular,  claw  about  1J  line  long.  Anthers  very  small,  orbicular-cordate.  Style 
3 lines  long,  the  lower  portion  rubescent  and  bristly,  the  upper  part  thickish  and 
glabrous.  Stigma  barbate.  Ovary  1 -ovulate. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dullachy. 


30.  INDIGOFERA,  Linn. 

(From  Indigo  and  fero,  to  bear. 

(Sphasridiophorum,  Desv.) 

Calyx-tube  short,  broad  and  oblique,  the  teeth  or  lobes  nearly  equal  or  the 
lowest  longest.  Standard  ovate  or  orbicular,  sessile  or  narrowed  into  a short 
claw  ; keel  erect,  obtuse  or  acuminate,  with  a hollow  protuberance  or  spur  on 
each  side.  Upper  stamen  free  from  the  base,  the  others  united  in  a sheath  open 
on  the  upper  side  ; anthers  uniform,  tipped  by  the  point  of  the  connectivum 
resembling  a small  gland.  Ovary  sessile  or  nearly  so,  with  several  or  rarely  1 or 
2 ovules  ; style  incurved  at  the  top,  with  a terminal  stigma.  Pod  oblong,  linear 
or  rarely  globular,  terete  or  rarely  flattened,  straight  or  incurved,  2-valved,  divided 
transversely  between  the  seeds  by  cellular  tissue.  Seeds  globular,  or  truncate  at 
each  end,  or  flattened,  not  strophiolate. — Herbs,  undershrubs  or  shrubs,  more  or 
less  clothed  or  sprinkled  with  appressed  hairs  attached  by  the  centre,  sometimes 
mixed  with  loose  hairs  or  tomentum.  Leaves  in  the  Australian  species  1-foliolate 
or  pinnate  with  3 or  more  leaflets,  occasionally  stipellate.  Stipules  small, 
setaceous.  Flowers  usually  red  or  purple,  in  axillary  spikes  or  racemes.  Bracts 
usually  small  and  deciduous.  Bracteoles  none.  Standard  usually  silky-pubescent 
outside. 

A very  large  and  distinct  genus  widely  spread  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  globe,  especially 
numerous  in  tropical  and  southern  Africa.  Of  the  Australian  species,  8 out  of  the  10  herbaceous 
ones  are  common  in  India,  the  remaining  2 herbaceous  ones  and  the  4 shrubby  ones  are  all 
endemic.— Benth. 


Calyx-lobes  very  much  longer  than  the  very  short  tube.  Herbs  or 

undershrubs. 

Leaves  simple,  nearly  sesssile,  linear  or  narrow-oblong. 

Flowers  in  short  sessile  spikes.  Pod  globular,  1-seeded 1.  7.  linifolia. 

Flowers  in  long  pedunculate  racemes.  Pod  linear,  several-seeded  . . 4.  7.  haplophylla. 

Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate.  Flowers  scarcely  2 lines  long,  in  very  short 
sessile  spikes. 

Plant  conspicuously  glandular-dotted.  Ovules  2.  Pod  ovoid-oblong, 

2 lines  long,  reflexed,  pubescent  and  glandular 3.  7.  glandulosa. 

Plant  with  very  small  glandular  dots.  Ovules  8 or  more.  Pod  slender, 

refiexed,  glabrous,  nearly  Jin.  long 51.  trifoliata. 

Plant  pale  or  hoary.  Ovules  many.  Pod  spreading,  slightly  incurved, 

1 to  ljin.  long,  obtusely  4-angled 6.  7.  trita. 

Leaves  pinnate,  with  several  pairs  of  leaflets. 

Pod  short.  Ovules  and  seeds  2.  Spikes  short,  dense  and  sessile  . . . 2.  7.  cnneophylla. 


Indigofera.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


385 


Pod  linear.  Ovules  and  seeds  several. 

Calyx  much  shorter  than  the  petals. 

Flowers  rather  crowded  in  sessile  racemes.  Pod  1 to  ljin.  long, 

with  an  incurved  point 7.  I.  parvijlora. 

Flowers  very  small,  distant,  in  slender  racemes.  Pod  J to  Jin.  long, 

straight,  very  slender,  often  viscid 8.  I.  viscosa. 

Calyx-lobes  about  as  long  as  the  petals.  Racemes  loose.  Plant 

hirsute  with  spreading  hairs 9.  7.  hirsuta. 

Calyx-teeth  all  very  short,  the  lower  ones  rarely  rather  longer  than  the  tube. 

Shrubs  (except  I.  pratensis). 

Shrubby,  densely  argenteo-canescent.  Leaflets  large,  obovate.  Pod  reflexed, 

3 or  4-seeded,  torulose 10.  I.  argentea. 

Shrubby,  argenteo-canescent.  Leaflets  9 to  13,  large,  obovate-oblong. 

Pod  nearly  straight,  8 to  12-seeded,  not  torulose 11.  I.  tinctoria. 

Small  suffruticulose.  Leaflets  5 to  9,  rarely  3,  obovate.  Flowers  some- 
what crowded ; pedicels  short.  Calyx-teeeth  short.  Pod  terete,  shortly 

beaked  ; seeds  numerous 14.  7.  Baileyi. 

Undershrub.  Leaflets  slightly  veined.  Racemes  rather  long,  with 

numerous  rosy  flowers 15.  I.  decora. 

Leaflets  usually  5,  obovate  or  orbicular,  the  veins  scarcely  conspicuous  . . 13.  L saxicola. 

Leaflets  9 or  more. 

Herb  or  undershrub.  Leaflets  mucronate  and  distinctly  veined. 

Stipellas  setaceous.  Flowers  5 to  6 lines  long 12.  I.  pratensis. 


Shrubs.  Leaflets  obscurely  veined.  Stipellse  none  or  replaced  by  small 
glands. 

Calyx  truncate,  the  teeth  scarcely  prominent.  Plant  nearly  glabrous. 

Flowers  3 to  4 lines  long,  on  rather  long  pedicels.  Pod  quite 

glabrous 16.  7.  australis. 

Calyx-teeth  distinct,  the  lowest  as  long  as  the  tube  or  nearly  so. 

Whole  plant  slightly  canescent.  Pods  pubescent,  at  least  when 

young.  Leaflets  contracted  at  the  base  or  petiolulate 17.  7.  brevidens. 


1.  I.  linifolia  (Flax-leaved),  Retz;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  222;  Benth.  FI.  Anstr.  ii. 
195.  A slender  much-branched  diffuse  or  procumbent  annual  or  perennial  of  J 
to  ljft.,  more  or  less  hoary  or  white.  Leaves  simple,  almost  sessile,  linear  or 
rarely  oblong-lanceolate,  J to  1-Jin.  long.  Flowers  very  small,  in  sessile  spikes, 
very  short  when  in  flower,  and  rarely  lengthening  to  Jin.  when  in  fruit.  Calyx- 
teeth  subulate-pointed,  much  longer  than  the  tube,  the  lower  ones  as  long  as  the 
petals.  Standard  sessile,  about  1J  line  long.  Ovary  sessile,  with  1 ovule.  Pod 
nearly  globular,  white-tomentose,  about  1 line  diameter. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  198; 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  101  ; S pharidiophornm  linifolium,  Desv.,  and  S.  abyssinicum, 
Spach,  in  Jaub.  and  Spach,  111.  PI.  Or.  v.  103,  t.  494. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander ; Shoalwater  Bay,  It.  Brown;  Dawson  River, 
F.v.  Mueller;  Rockhampton,  Dallachy;  Bremer  River,  Fraser;  also  in  Leichhardt's  collection. 

The  species  is  common  in  tropical  Asia  and  some  parts  of  Africa.  Wight,  Ic.  t.  313,  represents 
a short  broad-leaved  variety  not  found  in  Australia. — Bentli. 

2.  I.  enneaphylla  (of  9 leaflets),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  229  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  196.  A prostrate  straggling  or  rarely  erect  perennial  of  1 to  ljft., 
hoary  or  almost  silky-pubescent,  the  branches  angular  with  the  hairs  sometimes 
spreading.  Leaflets  5 to  9,  mostly  alternate  or  scarcely  opposite,  obovate  or 
oblong-cuneate,  3 to  4 or  rarely  5 lines  long.  Flowers  very  small,  in  sessile 
spikes  which  are  short  and  dense  when  in  flower,  rarely  J-in.  long  in  fruit.  Calyx- 
teeth  much  longer  than  the  tube  and  shorter  than  the  petals.  Standard  about 
3 lines  long,  narrowed  into  a broad  claw  ; keel  narrow,  almost  acuminate.  Ovary 
with  2 or  rarely  3 ovules.  Pod  terete,  about  3 lines  long,  usually  2-seeded. — W. 
and  Arn.  Prod.  199  ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  403  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  102. 

Hab.:  Bay  of  Inlets,  Banks  and  Solander;  Keppel  Bay,  It.  Brown;  Dawson  River,  F.  v. 
Mueller;  Fitzroy  River,  Dallachy  ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan  ; Connor’s  River,  Bowman;  Rocking- 
ham Bay,  Islands  of  Torres  Straits,  &e. 

The  species  is  common  in  the  plains  of  India. 


386 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSflE. 


[Indigo f era. 


3.  I.  glandulosa  (glandulous),  Willd.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  223  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  196.  An  annual  or  perennial  with  the  habit  nearly  of  I.  trifoliata,  but  usually 
rather  stouter  and  taller,  more  pubescent,  and  conspicuously  marked  with 
glandular  dots,  especially  on  the  under  side  of  the  leaflets.  Leaflets  3,  from 
obovate  to  narrow-oblong,  obtuse,  f to  lin.  long,  more  hoary  than  in  I.  trifoliata. 
Flowers  very  small,  in  sessile  racemes  very  short  at  first,  but  lengthening  out  to 
nearly  ^in.  Calyx  glandular  and  hirsute,  about  1 line  long,  the  lobes  subulate, 
much  longer  than  the  tube.  Standard  about  2 lines  long,  narrowed  at  the  base, 
pubescent  and  glandular  outside.  Ovules  2.  Pod  reflexed,  ovoid-oblong,  almost 
4-angled,  about  2 lines  long,  glandular  and  pubescent. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  199  ; 
Wight,  Ic.  t.  330;  Psoraiea  Leichhardtii,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  22. 

Hab.:  Comet  River,  Leichhardt. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  E.  India.  It  has  the  habit  and  foliage  of  I.  trifoliata,  with 
the  pod  of  I.  enneuphylla. — Bentli. 


4.  I.  haplophylla  (single  leaflet),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  102  ; Bentli. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  196.  An  erect  or  rarely  diffuse  branching  herb  of  1ft.  or  rather 
more,  pale  or  hoary  with  a slight  pubescence.  Leaves  simple,  almost  sessile, 
linear  or  very  narrow-oblong,  mostly  1 to  2in.  long.  Racemes  slender,  pedun- 
culate, scarcely  exceeding  the  leaves.  Calyx-lobes  much  longer  than  the  tube, 
but  much  shorter  than  the  petals.  Standard  narrowed  at  the  base,  but  not 
clawed  ; keel  obtuse.  Pod  straight,  rather  slender,  cylindrical,  spreading,  often 
lin.  long  or  rather  more. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 


5.  I.  trifoliata  (three-foliolate),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  223  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  197.  Stock  perennial,  with  several  ascending  or  erect  rather  slender  stems  of 
1 to  1 or  1-J-ft.,  the  pubescence  very  short  and  scarcely  hoary.  Leaflets  3,  on  a 
slender  petiole,  obovate-oblong,  cuneate  or  narrow-oblong,  mostly  \ to  lin.  long, 
green  or  slightly  hoary  underneath.  Racemes  sessile,  exceedingly  short.  Flowers 
very  small.  Calyx-teeth  much  longer  than  the  tube,  but  scarcely  so  long  as  the 
claws  of  the  lower  petals.  Standard  about  2 lines  long,  narrowed  into  a short 
broad  claw  ; keel  obtuse,  pubescent  and  glandular  as  well  as  the  standard.  Pod 
slender,  reflexed,  about  |in.  long,  with  4 prominent  angles  or  narrow  longitudinal 
wings,  many-seeded. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  201 ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  314  ; F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  iii.  104. 

Hab.:  Bustard  Bay,  Banks  and  Solander ; Northumberland  Island,  R.  Brown;  Glasshouse 
Mountains,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; along  the  coast  and  adjoining  islands,  A.  Cunningham,  M'Gillivray, 
Henne,  Dallacliy,  also  in  Leichhardt's  collection  ; and  many  other  localities. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago.  It  is  always  much  more 
slender  than  I.  trita,  with  more  closely  sessile  short  spikes  or  clusters  of  much  smaller  flowers. 
— Benth. 

6.  I.  trita  (worn),  Linn.  DC.  Prod.  ii.  232  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  197.  A 
decumbent  or  suberect  perennial  of  ^ to  IJft.,  pale  or  hoary  with  a minute 
pubescence.  Leaflets  3,  or  very  rarely  5,  on  a rather  rigid  petiole,  from  broadly 
obovate  and  3 or  4 lines  long  to  elliptical-oblong  and  above  lin.  long.  Flowers 
small,  very  nearly  sessile ; the  racemes  sometimes  short,  dense,  and  nearly  sessile, 
sometimes  pedunculate,  interrupted,  and  attaining  several  inches.  Calyx-teeth 
much  longer  than  the  tube,  but  not  exceeding  the  claws  of  the  lower  petals. 
Standard  nearly  3 lines  long,  narrowed  at  the  base  but  scarcely  clawed  ; keel 
almost  acuminate.  Pod  rather  rigid,  usually  incurved,  obscurely  quadrangular, 
with  thickened  sutures,  1 to  l£in.  long  or  even  more. — Hook.  Comp.  Bot.  Mag.  i. 
t.  16  ; W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  203  ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  315,  386  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  103. 


Indigofera .] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


387 


Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown , Henne ; and  adjoining  mainland, 
Landsborough ; in  the  interior,  Mitchell ; Peak  Downs,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Bowen  River,  Boxvman  : 
and  many  other  localities  north  and  south. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago.  I.  Leschenaxdtii  and  I. 
timoriensis,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  223,  which  have  been  referred  to  I.  trifoliata,  both  belong  to  I.  trita. — 
Benth. 

7.  I.  parviflora  (small- flowered),  Heyne ; W.  and  Am.  Prod.  201  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  197.  An  erect  herb  of  1 to  2ft.,  pale  or  hoary  with  a minute 
pubescence.  Leaflets  9 to  13  or  rarely  fewer,  linear  or  rarely  oblong,  mostly  f to 
lin.  long.  Racemes  usually  short,  rather  loose,  rarely  lengthening  out  to  1 or 
2in.,  and  flowering  almost  from  the  base.  Calyx  small,  the  lobes  much  longer 
than  the  tube  but  much  shorter  than  the  petals.  Standard  2 to  2f  lines  long, 
narrowed  into  a short  claw,  glabrous  or  nearly  so  ; keel  terminating  in  a linear 
obtuse  point  protruding  beyond  the  wings.  Anthers  small,  tipped  with  a minute 
point.  Pod  nearly  glabrous,  linear,  with  thickened  sutures,  1 to  lfin.  long, 
straight  except  an  incurved  or  hooked  end. — I.  deflexa,  Hochst.  in  A.  Rich.  FI. 
Abyssin.  i.  178  ; I.  oxycarpa,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  103. 

Hab.:  Walloon  and  Peak  Downs,  Bowman;  the  Leichhardt  district,  and  other  localities. 

The  species  is  common  in  the  E.  Indian  peninsula,  also  in  Abyssinia  and  Cordofan. 

8.  X.  viscosa  (sticky),  Lam.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  227  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  198. 
A slender  wiry  annual  or  perennial,  with  much-branched  decumbent  or  erect 
stems  of  f to  1ft.,  more  or  less  clothed  with  spreading  glandular  viscid  hairs, 
mixed  with  the  ordinary  pubescence  of  the  genus.  Leaflets  9 to  15,  ovate  or 
oblong,  sometimes  all  under  2 lines,  sometimes  3 to  4 lines  long.  Flowers  very 
small,  distant,  in  slender  racemes  rather  shorter  than  the  leaves.  Calyx-lobes 
much  longer  than  the  tube,  but  not  exceeding  the  claws  of  the  lower  petals. 
Standard  almost  sessile,  about  1 1 line  long  ; keel  obtuse,  the  lateral  spurs  very 
short.  Pod  slender,  straight,  spreading  or  pendulous,  f to  fin.  long,  torulose, 
with  viscid  hairs  mixed  with  the  ordinary  pubescence. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  200  ; 
Wight,  Ic.  t.  404 ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  104. 

Hab  : Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown ; Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander, 
R.  Brown;  Port  Curtis,  M'Gillivray ; E.  coast,  A.  Cunningham;  Port  Denison,  Fitzalan; 
Rockhampton,  Bowman  ; Comet  River,  Leichhardt. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  tropical  Asia  and  Africa. 

9.  I.  hirsuta  (hairy),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  228  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  198. 
A decumbent  or  ascending  branching  annual,  1 to  2ft.  high,  remarkable  for  the 
spreading  hairs  which  clothe  the  branches,  petioles,  inflorescence,  and  calyx. 
Leaflets  7 to  11,  obovate  or  oblong,  f to  lin.  long,  with  stiff  appressed  hairs. 
Racemes  usually  dense,  shortly  pedunculate,  1 to  4in.  long.  Calyx  with  scarcely 
any  tube,  the  subulate  lobes  often  nearly  as  long  as  the  petals.  Standard  fully 
3 lines  long,  narrowed  into  a distinct  claw.  Pod  about  fin.  long,  straight, 
quadrangular,  reflexed  on  the  peduncle,  very  hirsute. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod. 
204 ; Hook.  Comp.  Bot.  Mag.  ii.  t.  24  ; Benth.  FI.  Hongk.  76 ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm. 
iii.  105. 

Hab.:  Bay  of  Inlets,  Banks  and  Solander;  Keppel  Bay,  R.  Brown;  Port  Denison,  Fitzalan ; 
Rockhampton,  Bowman  ; Taylor’s  Range,  Eraser  ; Brisbane  River,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; very  common. 

The  species  is  widely  distributed  over  tropical  Asia  and  Africa,  and  now  introduced  also  into 
some  parts  of  tropical  America. — Benth. 

10.  *X.  argentea  (silvery),  Linn.  DC.  Prod.  ii.  224  ; Hook,  in  FI.  Brit.  Ind. 

ii.  98.  A shrub  several  feet  high,  with  sulcate  branches.  Leaves  1 to  2in.  long ; 
leaflets  opposite,  subcoriaceous,  persistently  argenteous,  f to  lin.  long,  petioles 
fin.;  stipules  minute,  setaceous.  Racemes  subsessile,  12  to  20-flowered,  shorter 


888 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Indigo f era. 


than  the  leaves,  £ to  lin.  long  whilst  in  flower.  Calyx  4 line,  campanulate, 

argenteous ; teeth  deltoid,  cuspidate,  as  long  as  tube.  Corolla  2 lines  long, 

reddish-yellow,  externally  canescent.  Pod  about  £in.  long,  2 lines  broad,  at  first 
argenteous,  finally  giabrescent,  distinctly  torulose. 

The  variety  ccerulea,  with  leaves  2 to  3in.  long,  leaflets  7 to  9,  less  silvery  than  the  type,  with 
more  elongated  racemes,  1 to  2in.  long  (the  I.  tinctoria  var.  brachycarpa,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  224),  has 
been  met  with  as  a naturalised  plant  by  Mr.  J.  Keys  at  Bundaberg. 

11.  *1.  tinctoria  (from  furnishing  a dye),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  224  ; J.  G. 

Baker  in  Hook.  Brit.  Ind.  FI.  ii.  99.  Indigo  plant.  A shrub  4 to  6ft.  high,  with 
twiggy  woody  thinly  silvery  branches.  Leaves  1 to  2in.  long  ; leaflets  opposite  ; 
membranous,  turning  blackish  when  dried ; petiole  i to  lin.  long.  Racemes 
lax,  nearly  sessile,  2 to  4in.  long.  Calyx  ^ line  long,  silvery  ; teeth  as  long  as 

the  tube.  Corolla  about  2i  lines,  reddish-yellow.  Pod  4 to  12  lines  long,  about 

1 line  thick,  giabrescent,  scarcely  at  all  recurved. 

I.  Anil,  Linn.  DC.  Prod.  ii.  225,  also  commonly  cultivated,  a native  of  America,  differs  by  its 
short  congested  racemes  and  pod  turned  back  like  a sickle.  I.fiaccida,  var.  comtricta,  Thwaites 
Enum.  411,  from  Ceylon,  is  probably  a distinct  species,  but  the  flowers  are  unknown.  It  has  the 
habit  and  leaves  of  I.  tinctoria,  with  a slender  tetraquetrous  subtorulose  4 to  6-seeded  pod. — Baker. 

Mr.  Baker’s  description  and  remarks  are  reproduced  in  full  to  assist  persons  to  identify  the 
plants,  all  being  now  and  again  met  with  as  strays  from  cultivation,  the  kinds  having  been 
introduced  by  the  late  Colonial  Botanist  (Mr.  Walter  Hill),  and  the  seed  distributed  by  him  to 
cultivators. 

12.  I.  pratensis  (meadow),  F.  v.  M.  Rep.  Burdek.  Exped.  10  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  198.  A diffuse  perennial,  pale  or  hoary  with  the  ordinary  pubescence 
of  the  genus,  the  branches  angular,  ascending  to  1 or  2ft.  Leaflets  about  13  to 
21,  from  broadly  oval-oblong  to  narrow-oblong,  obtuse  with  a fine  straight  point, 
^ to  lin.  long,  the  pinnate  veins  usually  conspicuous  underneath.  Stipules 
setaceous,  often  8 to  4 lines  long,  and  small  setaceous  stipellae  usually  present. 
Flowers  rather  large,  in  pedunculate  racemes  longer  than  the  leaves,  the  pedicels 

2 to  3 lines  long.  Calyx  above  1 line  long,  the  teeth  shorter  than  the  tube  as  in 
the  shrubby  species.  Standard  nearly  6 lines  long ; keel  almost  acuminate.  Pod 
cylindrical,  straight,  rather  thick,  1 to  Hin.  long. 

Hab.:  Bay  of  Inlets,  Banks  and  Solander ; Broadsound  and  Keppel  Bay,  R.  Brown;  along 
various  points  of  the  E.  coast  and  adjoining  islands,  A.  Cunningham,  M‘Gillivray,  Henne,  and 
others;  in  the  interior,  Mitchell ; on  the  Burdekin,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Brisbane  River,  Fraser,  F.  v. 
Mueller,  &c.;  Mackenzie  Hill,  Leichhardt. 

13.  I.  saxicola  (on  rocks),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  LI.  Austr.  ii.  199.  A 
shrub  of  3 or  4ft.,  with  spreading  branches,  slightly  hoary  with  a minute  pubes- 
cence. Leaflets  5 or  rarely  7,  obovate  or  orbicular  and  very  obtuse,  mostly  about 
lin.  long,  on  petiolules  of  1 to  2 lines,  the  pinnate  veins  scarcely  prominent. 
Racemes  pedunculate,  rather  slender,  longer  than  the  leaves.  Calyx-teeth  shorter 
than  the  tube,  the  upper  ones  broad  and  distant.  Standard  sessile,  3 lines  long 
or  rather  more  ; keel  acute.  Pod  terete,  spreading,  ^ to  fin.  long,  straight. 

Hab.:  Gulf  country. 

14.  I,  Baileyi  (after  F.  M.  Bailey),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ix.  43.  A small  under- 
shrub with  shortly  running  roots  from  which  slender  stems  arise  to  sometimes 
lft.,  but  usually  only  a few  inches;  the  branches  angular,  sparsely  strigulose. 
Leaflets  5 to  9,  rarely  only  3,  obovate,  often  thin,  2 to  6 lines  long,  very  shortly 
petiolulate,  glabrous  above,  glaucous  and  sparsely  strigulose  beneath.  Stipules 
semi-lanceolate,  about  1 line  long.  Stipellfe  very  short,  subulate.  Bracts 
fugaceous,  minute,  acute.  Calyx  conspicuously  strigulose,  scarcely  1 line  long. 
The  upper  petals  rosy  towards  the  margin,  the  lowest  very  pale  green,  2 lines 
long.  Anthers  very  minute,  cuspidate.  Style  glabrous.  Pod  deflexed,  about 
lin.  long  and  1 line  broad.  Seeds  hoary-brown,  almost  cubical. 

Hab.:  Common  on  the  Ironbark  ridges  about  Brisbane. 


Indigofera.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


889 


15.  *1,  decora  (beautiful),  Lindl.  in  Journ.  FLort.  Soc.  Lond.  i.  68,  and  Bot. 
Bet).  1846,  t.  22  ; Benth.  hi.  Hongk.  77  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  5068.  A somewhat  strag- 
gling undershrub  from  a running  rhizome ; stems  often  distant,  1 to  3ft.  high, 
nearly  glabrous.  Leaflets  opposite,  3 to  6 pairs  besides  the  terminal  one,  from 
oval  to  oblong-elliptical,  the  largest  from  1^-  to  2in.  long,  usually  acute  or  scarcely 
obtuse,  glaucous,  and  slightly  hairy  underneath,  the  smaller  veins  scarcely  con- 
spicuous. Racemes  elongated,  axillary,  solitary,  long  as  the  leaves,  bearing 
numerous  patent  or  deflexed  pink  and  rose-coloured  flowers,  nearly  lin.  long. 
Calyx  short,  cup-shaped,  5-toothed.  Standard  oblong,  streaked  with  a horseshoe 
band  near  the  base.  Keel  petals  ciliate  on  the  upper  edge.  Pod  about  14in., 
nearly  straight,  erecto-patent. 

Hab.:  A Chinese  species  found  here  and  there  as  a stray  from  garden  culture,  the  flowers  then 
being  rather  smaller  than  above  stated. 

16.  X.  australis  (Australian),  WUld.:  DC.  Prod.  ii.  226 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  199.  An  erect  branching  shrub  of  2 to  4ft.,  assuming  occasionally  the 
appearance  of  a low  undershrub,  either  glabrous  or  slightly  sprinkled  with  the 
small  hairs  of  the  genus.  Leaflets  usually  9 to  17,  oblong,  obtuse  or  retuse,  \ to 
fin.  long,  but  varying  to  broadly  ovate,  almost  orbicular  in  some  specimens  or 
nearly  linear  in  others.  Stipules  small ; stipellae  none  except  minute  glands. 
Flowers  red  and  showy,  in  dense  or  loose  racemes  shorter  or  rather  longer  than 
the  leaves,  the  pedicels  usually  longer  than  the  calyx.  Calyx  about  1 line  long, 
broad  and  obliquely  truncate,  the  teeth  either  inconspicuous  or  the  lower  ones 
especially  slightly  prominent,  but  always  much  shorter  than  the  tube.  Standard 
truncate  at  the  base,  with  an  exceedingly  short  claw,  3 to  4 lines  long.  Pod 
spreading  terete,  straight  or  nearly  so,  1 to  Hin.  long. — Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  45; 
Bot.  Reg.  t.  386;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  149;  Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  99  ; 1.  angulata, 
Lindl.  Bot.  Reg.  t.  991  ; I.  sylvatica,  Sieb.  in  Hook.  Bot.  Mag.  t.  3000  ; I.  ervoides, 
Meissn.  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  89. 

Hab  : Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  Fraser,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others. 

Amidst  all  its  variations,  this  species  may  be  known  by  its  glabrous,  not  hoary,  aspect,  not- 
withstanding the  minute  hairs  often  visible  under  a lens,  by  the  very  short  or  quite  obsolete 
teeth  of  the  calyx,  and  by  the  pod  glabrous  even  when  quite  young.  The  following  are  the 
principal  forms  it  assumes,  which,  although  they  often  pass  one  into  another,  are  nevertheless 
sometimes  considered  as  distinct  species. — Benth. 

a.  angulata.  Tall,  with  angular  branches.  Flowers  large  and  showy. 

b.  gracilis,  DC.  Branches  terete  and  as  well  as  the  petioles  and  racemes  more  slender. 
Flowers  rather  smaller.  Brisbane  River. 

c.  minor.  More  scrubby  and  branched,  of  a pale  color,  the  branchlets  short  and  somewhat 
angular.  Leaflets  small,  with  small  stipellary  glands.  Flowers  small,  in  short  racemes. 

d.  signata,  F.  v.  M.  Rigid,  very  glabrous,  apparently  almost  leafless,  the  numerous  rigid 
petioles  bearing  very  small  obcordate  obovate  or  cuneate  leaflets  in  distant  pairs,  with  very 
prominent  dark-coloured  stipellary  glands.  Flowers  as  in  the  var.  minor. 

e.  platijpoda.  With  the  same  rigid  aspect  and  few  small  leaflets  with  prominent  stipellary 
glands  as  the  var.  signata,  but  the  common  petioles  very  rigid  and  flattened,  often  above  1 line 
broad. 


17.  I.  brevidens  (teeth  short),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Prop.  Austr.  385,  and  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  200.  A slender  shrub,  very  nearly  allied  to  I.  australis,  of  which  F.  v. 
Mueller  considers  it  a variety,  but  always  hoary  or  silvery  with  the  appressed 
forked  pubescence  of  the  genus  or  white  with  a denser  tomentum.  Leaflets  from 
about  9 to  21,  obovate  or  oblong,  obtuse  or  mucronate,  rarely  £in.  long,  usually 
firmer  than  in  I.  australis,  and  hoary  or  white  on  both  sides,  more  or  less  petio- 
lulate.  Stipules  rather  short  and  deciduous  or  rarely  more  persistent  and 
recurved.  Flowers  rather  smaller  than  in  /.  australis,  the  calyx-teeth  much  more 
prominent  although  still  very  short,  the  lowest  occasionally  as  long  as  the  tube. 
Standard  densely  silky-pubescent.  Pod  always  puboscent  or  tomentose,  at  least 
when  young. — I.  lasiantlia,  F.  v.  M,  in  Rep.  Greg.  Exped.  6, 


890  XLIII.  LEGUMINOSrE.  [. Indigofera . 

Hab.:  St.  George’s  Bridge  on  the  Balonne,  Mitchell;  Peak  Downs,  F.  v.  Mueller;  in  the  scrub 
north  of  Expedition  Range,  Leichhardt ; also  in  Bowman's  and  other  collections. 

Var.  uncinata.  Stipules  persistent,  broader  at  the  base,  recurved  and  sometimes  spinescent. 

Var.  (?)  galegoides,  R.  Br.  Branches  softly  tomentose ; leaflets  numerous,  very  white  under- 
neath. Pod  small,  loosely  pubescent. — Cumberland  Islands,  R.  Brown. 

81.  LAMPROLOBIUM,  Benth. 

(Pods  smooth.) 

Calyx  deeply  cleft,  the  2 upper  lobes  united  nearly  to  the  top.  Standard 
orbicular,  narrowed  into  a short  claw  ; wings  obliquely  oblong,  free ; keel  much 
curved,  obtuse.  Stamens  all  united  in  a sheath  open  on  the  upper  side  ; anthers 
uniform.  Ovary  shortly  stipitate,  with  several  ovules  ; style  filiform,  incurved,  with 
a terminal  stigma.  Pod  stipitate,  oblong-linear,  very  flat,  2-valved,  with  transverse 
partitions  between  the  seeds,  the  valves  coriaceous.  Seeds  oblong,  with  a fleshy 
strophiole.  Radicle  short,  quite  straight. — Shrub.  Leaves  pinnate,  without 
stipellae.  Stipules  minute.  Flowers  yellow,  small,  solitary  (or  2 or  3 ?)  on 
terminal  or  lateral  peduncles.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  minute  and  very  deciduous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species  endemic  in  Australia.  In  the  structure  of  the  seeds, 
with  a straight  embryo,  it  differs  from  all  Galegece  except  the  S.  American  genera  Brongniartia 
and  Harpalyce. — Benth. 

1.  L.  fruticosum  (shrubby),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  202;  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  1024. 
An  erect  shrub  of  5 or  6ft.,  the  branches  softly  pubescent  (the  pubescence 
of  an  old-gold  colour).  Leaflets  3,  5 or  7,  or  rarely  solitary  in  the  upper  leaves, 
oblong,  obtuse  or  mucronate,  1 to  2in.  long,  coriaceous,  glabrous  or  sprinkled 
with  appressed  hairs  above,  silky-pubescent  underneath  (nerves  and  reticulations 
prominent  on  both  sides).  Peduncles  short,  terminal  axillary  or  extra-axillary 
and  all  apparently  1 -flowered  in  the  specimens  seen,  but  perhaps  sometimes 
bearing  a raceme  of  2 or  3.  Calyx  (greenish-yellow)  silky-villous,  3 to  4 lines 
long,  like  that  of  some  Crotalarias,  the  2 upper  lobes  falcate  and  united  in  a 
concave  upper  lip.  Petals  not  exceeding  the  calyx  ; (standard  yellow,  cordate,  on 
a short  claw,  the  other  petals  yellowish -green,  all  shorter  than  the  calyx.  Upper 
stamen  slender  but  quite  free,  not  geniculate).  Pod  1 to  l£in.  long,  3 or  4 lines 
broad,  glabrous  and  smooth.  Seeds  transverse, — Crotalarioides  fruticosa,  Soland. 
ms.;  Glycine  lamprocarpa,  A.  Cunn.  Herb. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander,  A.  Cunningham  (Hook.  l.c.  10) ; Lizard  Island, 
Walter  (F.  v.  M.) ; Irvinebank,  F.  Bennett. 

The  bracketed  words  denote  in  which  the  Irvinebank  specimens  differ  from  Bentham’s 
description  given  in  the  FI.  Austr.  ii.  202. 

32.  "GALEGA,  Linn. 

(From  the  Greek  ; supposed  to  increase  the  supply  of  milk  in 
animals  (goats)  fed  with  the  plant.) 

Calyx-teeth  unequal ; standard  obovate-oblong,  on  short  narrow  claws ; wings 
oblong,  slightly  adhering  to  the  keel ; keel  slightly  incurved,  obtuse.  Stamens  all 
connate  in  a tube  ; anthers  uniform,  or  with  alternate  smaller  ones.  Ovary 
sessile ; ovules  numerous.  Style  subulate,  incurved,  not  bearded  ; stigma  small, 
terminal.  Pod  linear,  somewhat  terete,  continuous  within,  2-valved,  obliquely 
striate.  Seeds  transverse,  oblong,  estrophiolate. — Tall,  erect  perennial  herbs. 
Leaves  imparipinnate  ; leaflets  entire.  Stipules  semisagittate.  Flowers  white  or 
blue,  in  terminal  or  axillary  racemes.  Bracts  narrow,  often  persistent ; bracteoles 
none. 

1.  Gr.  officinalis  (officinal),  Linn.  Goat’s  Rue.  Plant  of  a few  feet  high. 
Leaflets  lanceolate,  acute,  glabrous.  Stipules  broad-lanceolate.  Flowers  in 
racemes,  blue  or  white. 

Hab.:  Southern  Europe.  Met  with  as  a stray  from  cultivation  on  the  Darling  Downs. 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^. 


391 


33.  TEPHROSIA,  Pers. 

(From  the  foliage  being  usually  grey.) 

Calyx-teeth  or  lobes  nearly  equal,  or  the  2 upper  ones  more  united,  or  the 
lowest  the  longest.  Petals  clawed  ; standard  nearly  orbicular,  usually  reflexed  ; 
wings  slightly  adhering  to  the  keel ; keel  incurved,  obtuse  or  scarcely  acute. 
Upper  stamen  free  at  the  base,  usually  geniculate  and  at  first  united  with  the 
others  in  the  middle  in  a tube  or  sheath,  often  quite  free  as  the  flowering 
advances ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile,  with  many  or  rarely  1 or  2 ovules ; style 
in  the  Australian  species  glabrous,  incurved  or  indexed,  more  or  less  flattened 
with  a terminal  stigma,  often  slightly  penicillate.  Pod  linear  or  rarely  ovate, 
flattened,  2-valved.  Seeds  often  with  a small  strophiole. — Herbs,  undershrubs, 
or,  in  species  not  Australian,  shrubs.  Leaves  pinnate ; leaflets  usually  opposite 
with  a terminal  odd  one,  sometimes  reduced  to  a single  leaflet,  either  sessile  or 
articulate  on  the  petiole,  the  veins  in  most  species  numerous,  parallel  and  oblique 
with  the  midrib.  Flowers  red,  purple,  or  white,  in  pairs  or  clusters,  in  terminal, 
leaf-opposed  or  rarely  axillary  racemes,  the  lower  clusters  occasionally  or  some- 
times all  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves.  Bracteoles  none.  Standard  always  and  the 
keel  sometimes  pubescent  or  silky-villous  with  appressed  hairs. 

A large  genus,  widely  spread  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World,  and 
particularly  numerous  in  species  in  S.  Africa.  The  following  species  are  all  endemic  with  the 
exception  of  T.  purpurea , and,  even  of  that,  scarcely  any  of  the  Australian  varieties  quite  agree 
with  the  common  Asiatic  and  African  forms.  With  the  exception  perhaps  of  T.flammea  and 
T.  crocea,  they  all  belong  to  the  section  Reineria,  with  terminal  or  leaf-opposed  racemes  or 
axillary  clustered  pedicels,  and  to  the  large  subsection  with  subulate  or  small  stipules.  Several 
species  differ  from  all  extra-Australian  ones  in  the  venation  of  the  leaflets.  In  general  the 
Australian  species,  more  even  than  the  Asiatic  ones,  are  extremely  difficult  to  define ; 
the  terminal  or  axillary,  racemose  or  clustered  inflorescences,  usually  so  distinct,  seem  to 
pass  the  one  into  the  other  or  to  be  blended  together  even  on  the  same  specimen,  the  foliage  and 
indumentum  is  more  than  usually  diversified  and  variable,  and  when  to  this  is  added  the  imper- 
fection of  the  specimens  we  possess  from  tropical  Australia,  it  must  be  expected  that  further 
investigation  may  considerably  modify  the  circumscriptions  of  several  of  the  species  here 
described. — From  Bentham’s  note  on  the  Australian  species  in  FI.  Austr.  ii.  202. 

Leaflets  obovate,  oval,  elliptical,  or  oblong,  the  primary  veins  anastomosing 
or  reticulate  within  the  margin. 

Leaflets  mostly  5 to  11,  rarely  under  lin.  long.  Racemes  elongated. 

Plant  softly  tomentose  or  silky.  Flowers  numerous.  Calyx  4 to  5 lines 


long,  softly  villous,  lobes  longer  than  the  tube 1.  T.flammea. 

Plant  nearly  glabrous.  Flowers  few.  Calyx  scarcely  2 lines  long,  the 
teeth  very  short 2.  T.  reticulata. 

Leaflets  numerous,  above  £in.  long,  glabrous  above,  silky-pubescent  or 
villous  underneath.  Racemes  long. 

Leaflets  J to  lin.  long,  very  silky  underneath,  the  veins  reticulate. 

Stipules  persistent.  Bracts  small 3.  T.  crocea. 

Leaflets  1 to  2in.  long,  silky-pubescent  underneath,  the  primary  veins 
parallel  but  anastomosing  within  the  margins.  Stipules  very 
deciduous.  Bracts  linear-subulate,  long 4.  T.  oblongata. 

Leaflets  numerous,  not  |in.  long.  Racemes  long. 

Plant  loosely  pubescent  or  villous.  Stipules  striate,  reflexed.  Leaflets 

11  to  19 5.  T.porrecta. 

Plant  closely  silky-pubescent.  Stipules  minute,  erect.  Leaflets  30  to 
40  or  more G.  T.  polyzyga. 

Leaves  all  or  mostly  simple  or  1-foliolate.  Leaflets  long  and  linear  or 
cuneate-oblong,  the  veins  mostly  reaching  the  margin  or  irregular. 

Leaflets  long  and  narrow-linear,  either  solitary  with  2 stipellse  or  3 with 
the  middle  one  sessile  or  rarely  another  pair  lower  down.  Flowers 
very  small 7.  T.  leptoclada. 


Leaflets  cuneate-oblong,  1 or  rarely  3 or  5.  Flowers  large 11.2’.  oligophylla. 

Leaves  pinnate.  Primary  veins  of  the  leaflets  oblique,  numerous,  and 
parallel. 

Flowers  in  short  dense  terminal  racemes.  Leaflets  narrow,  silvery-silky 
underneath.  Pod  incurved  towards  the  end.  Standard  nearly  6 lines 
diameter.  Leaflets  usually  green  above 8.  T.  astragaloid.es. 


Part  II.  p 


392 


XL1II.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[ Tephrosia . 


Flowers  in  long  or  slender  racemes. 

Leaflets  small,  numerous,  with  a long  terminal  one.  Flowers  small. 

Pod  long 9.  2’.  juncea. 

Leaflets  few,  or,  if  many,  the  terminal  one  not  longer  than  the  others. 

Pod  about  lin.  long,  nearly  straight.  Seeds  orbicular. 

Leaflets  7 to  15.  Flowers  rarely  8 lines  long.  Pod  obliquely  acute, 
thin.  Racemes  filiform,  not  2in.  long,  with  few  distant  pairs  of 
flowers 10.  T.  filipes. 

Leaflets  solitary  or  rarely  3 or  5.  Flowers  about  6 lines  long.  Pod 

coriaceous,  almost  obtuse 11.  T.  oligopliylla. 

Pod  above  lin  long,  more  or  less  incurved.  Seeds  transversely 
oblong.  Racemes  usually  long. 

Leaflets  usually  above  7.  Calyx  small,  on  a slender  pedicel ; teeth 

subulate  or  very  short.  Pod  glabrous,  pubescent  or  loosely  villous  12.  T.  purpurea. 

Leaflets  usually  few,  long  and  narrow.  Calyx  large,  densely 
rusty-villous ; lobes  longer  than  the  tube,  incurved,  acuminate. 


Pedicels  short.  Pod  softly  and  closely  pubescent 13.  2'.  Bidwilli. 

Leaflets  usually  few,  cuneate,  silky  on  both  sides.  Calyx  small, 
softly  silky.  Pedicels  short.  Pod  much  curved,  scarcely 
flattened,  densely  silky-tomentose 14.  T.  rosea. 


1.  T.  flammea  (flame-coloured),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  204. 
An  erect  branching  undershrub,  of  3 to  4ft.,  the  branches  clothed  with  a loose 
velvety-rusty  pubescence.  Leaflets  5 to  9,  or  3 in  the  uppermost  leaves,  broadly 
elliptical-oblong  or  almost  ovate  or  obovate,  very  obtuse,  1 to  2in.  long,  shortly 
and  softly  pubescent  or  almost  silky  on  both  sides,  the  somewhat  distant  primary 
veins  and  reticulate  veinlets  very  prominent  underneath.  Racemes  terminal  or 
in  the  upper  axils.  Flowers  usually  orange-red,  numerous,  clustered  and  rather 
large.  Calyx-tube  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  lanceolate,  as  long  as  the  tube. 
Standard  fully  4 lines  diameter,  callous  at  the  base  above  the  claw ; keel  much 
curved,  almost  rostrate,  but  obtuse.  Upper  stamen  and  an  adjoining  portion  of 
the  staminal  tube  hairy.  Pod  long,  linear,  rusty-villous,  but  not  seen  perfect. 
Seed  nearly  orbicular,  with  a small  oblong  strophiole. 

Hab.:  Islands  Gulf  of  Carpentaria. 

In  inflorescence  this  species  seems  to  connect  the  sections  Brissonia  and  Reineria ; the  very  flat 
glabrous  style  is  more  that  of  Reineria.  The  venation  of  the  leaflets  differs  from  that  of  any 
extra- Australian  species . — Bentli . 

2.  T.  reticulata  (netted),  R.  Br.  Herb,  (under  Galega)  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  105  ; Fragm.  ix.  64.  Rootstock  perennial,  with  prostrate  or  ascending  stems, 
of  2ft.  or  more,  minutely  pubescent  with  appressed  hairs.  Leaflets  5 to  11  or 
more,  petiolulate,  ovate  or  oblong,  obtuse,  thinly  coriaceous,  the  primary  veins 
scarcely  more  prominent  than  the  reticulate  veinlets,  glabrous  or  loosely  pubescent 
underneath.  Stipules  sometimes  lanceolate,  the  lower  ones  reflexed.  Racemes 
long  and  rigid,  terminal  or  leaf-opposed.  Flowers  rather  small,  in  distant  pairs, 
on  pedicels  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Calyx  scarcely  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  shorter 
than  the  tube..  Standard  4 lines  long,  slightly  silky  outside  ; keel  incurved, 
obtuse.  Pod  2^-in.  long,  3 lines  broad,  broadly  linear,  nearly  straight  or 
recurved,  pubescent,  the  upper  suture  thickened,  the  valves  very  flat.  Seeds 
orbicular. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown ; Sim’s  Island,  A.  Cunningham; 
Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander  (a  more  glabrous  form) ; Herbert  River  and  Rockingham 
Bay,  Dallachy. 

3.  T.  crocea  (orange),  R.  Br.  Herb.  ( under  Galega)  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
205.  Stems  or  branches  diffuse  or  ascending,  attaining  2ft.  or  more,  softly  silky- 
villous.  Leaflets  usually  11  to  17,  from  obovate  to  narrow-oblong,  ^ to  lin.  long, 
obtuse  or  mucronate,  nearly  glabrous  above,  softly  silky  underneath,  the  primary 
veins  anastomosing  and  reticulate.  Stipules  lanceolate  or  linear,  reflexed,  per- 
sistent. Racemes  long,  terminal,  leafy  at  the  base.  Flowers  (pale  yellow,  R.  Br.) 


Tephrosia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS/E. 


893 


in  distant  pairs  or  clusters  on  short  pedicels.  Bracts  small.  Calyx  silky- 
pubescent,  about  3 lines  long,  the  lobes  nearly  as  long  as  the  tube.  Standard 
very  silky.  Pod  H to  2in.  long,  incurved,  softly  velvety.  Seeds  orbicular. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 

4.  T.  oblongata  (oblong),  R.  Br.  Herb.  ( under  Galega)  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr, 
ii.  205.  An  erect  shrub  or  undershrub,  of  5 or  6ft.,  the  branches  angular,  softly 
pubescent.  Leaflets  usually  11  to  17,  oblong,  obtuse,  1 to  2in.  long,  nearly 
glabrous  above,  silky-pubescent  underneath,  the  primary  pinnate  veins  parallel 
and  prominent  underneath,  but  anastomosing  within  the  margin.  Stipules  very 
deciduous.  Racemes  long  and  rigid,  terminal  or  in  the  upper  axils,  rarely  leaf- 
opposed.  Flowers  (almost  orange,  R.  Br.,  becoming  pink  when  dry)  in  distinct 
clusters.  Bracts  linear-subulate,  more  conspicuous  than  in  most  species.  Stan- 
dard fully  £in.  diameter,  callous  at  the  base  above  the  claw  ; keel  much  shorter 
and  much  curved.  Style  flattened,  glabrous.  Pod  not  seen. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 

A very  imperfect  specimen  of  A.  Cunningham’s  from  the  N.  coast  may  belong  to  the  same 
species,  the  specimens  of  which  sometimes  almost  assume  the  aspect  of  a Millettia. — Bentli. 

5.  T.  porrecta  (extending),  R.  Br.  Herb,  funder  Galega);  Bentli.  hi.  Austr. 
ii.  206.  Rootstock  thick,  with  elongated  diffuse  or  ascending  stems,  the  whole 
plant  loosely  pubescent  or  nearly  glabrous.  Leaflets  usually  11  to  19,  sessile, 
from  broadly  elliptical  oblong  to  nearly  linear,  obtuse  or  with  recurved  points,  3 
to  8 lines  long,  coriaceous,  the  primary  veins  arcuate  and  anastomosing  within 
the  margin  and  conspicuous  on  both  sides.  Stipules  striate,  recurved.  Racemes 
long  and  slender,  terminal,  often  leafy  at  the  base,  the  floral  leaves  usually 
3-foliolate.  Flowers  rather  small,  on  pedicels  longer  than  the  calyx.  Calyx 
pubescent,  about  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  narrow-subulate,  pointed,  at  least  as  long 
as  the  tube.  Standard  pubescent,  about  4 lines  diameter.  Style  scarcely 
flattened,  strongly  bearded.  Pod  about  1 to  l^in.  long,  arcuate  pubescent.  Seeds 
orbicular. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Br.  (Benth.  l.c.) 

6.  T.  polyzyga  (many  pairs  of  leaflets),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  206.  Stems  or  branches  elongated,  hoary  or  almost  silky  with  a close 
tomentum.  Leaflets  20  to  40  or  more,  on  a common  petiole  of  3 to  5in.,  oblong, 
obtuse,  mostly  4 or  5 lines  long,  rigid,  nearly  glabrous  above,  silky  pubescent 
underneath,  the  primary  veins  few  and  anastomosing  within  the  margin.  Flowers 
small,  in  distant  clusters,  in  long,  often  branched,  racemose  panicles.  Pedicels 
short.  Calyx  silky-tomentose,  2 to  2J  lines  long,  the  lobes  rather  broad,  acute, 
shorter  than  the  tube.  Standard  broad ; keel  obtuse.  Style  flat.  Pod  nearly 
straight,  l\  to  2in.  long,  softly  tomentose.  Seeds  lenticular. 

Hab.:  Thursday  and  other  islands  of  Torres  Straits,  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria. 

7.  T.  leptoclada  (branches  slender),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  207.  Apparently 
annual,  erect,  much  branched  at  the  base,  loosely  pubescent.  Leaflets  either 
single  with  a pair  of  stipellae,  or  3 digitate  at  the  end  of  the  petiole,  or  rarely  1 
or  2 pairs  lower  down  the  petiole,  linear,  often  2,  3,  or  even  4in.  long  when 
single,  acutely  acuminate,  glabrous  above,  pubescent  underneath.  Racemes  long, 
slender,  with  very  small  flowers  in  distant  pairs.  Pedicels  slender.  Calyx-teeth 
subulate,  longer  than  the  short  tube.  Standard  not  3 lines  diameter.  Pod  long, 
narrow,  straight,  pubescent.  Seeds  nearly  orbicular. 

Hab.:  Bowen  River,  Bowman  ; Walsh  River,  T.  Barclay -Millar, 


394 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


[Tephrosia. 


8.  T.  astragaloides  (like  an  Astragalus),  R.  Br.  Herb , (under  Galega); 

Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  208.  “ Too-ta,”  Cloncurry,  Roth.  An  erect  undershrub  of 

1 to  2ft.,  the  branches  softly  pubescent  or  silky.  Leaflets  usually  7 to  17,  rather 
crowded,  oblong-cuneate  or  almost  linear,  ^ to  lin.  long,  obtuse  or  retuse,  slightly 
pubescent  and  green  above,  softly  silky  and  almost  silvery  underneath.  Racemes 
short,  leafy,  with  crowded  rather  large  flowers,  or  very  rarely  elongated  with 
distant  clusters.  Calyx  2 lines  long  or  rather  more,  the  lobes  narrow,  acute, 
rather  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  above  the  middle.  Standard 
5 or  6 lines  diameter  ; keel  incurved,  obtuse.  Style  less  flattened  than  in  the 
other  Australian  species,  and  almost  terete  at  the  end,  with  a penicillate  stigma. 
Pod  above  lin.  long,  incurved  towards  the  end,  tomentose.  Seeds  orbicular. 

Hab.:  Shoalwater  Bay,  R.  Brown,  A.  Cunningham;  Dunk  Island,  M'Gillivray ; Burdekin 
Expedition,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Rockhampton,  Thozet,  Dallachy ; near  Marlborough,  Bowman; 
Charters  Towers,  C.  F.  Plant. 

The  leaves  bruised  and  thrown  into  water  to  poison  fish. — Roth. 

Var.  (?)  macrostachya.  Raceme  elongated.  Leaflets  silky-villous  on  both  sides.  Pod  of  T. 
astragaloides. — Bowen  River,  Bowman. 

9.  T.  juncea  (Rush-like),  R.  Br.  Herb,  (under  Galega)  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
208.  An  annual  or  perennial,  with  erect,  slender  but  rigid  and  virgate,  not 
much  branched  stems,  of  1J  to  2ft.,  glabrous  or  hoary-pubescent.  Leaflets  above 
20,  on  a long  slender  common  petiole,  the  terminal  one  oblong-linear,  f to  above 
lin.  long,  the  others  very  much  smaller,  obovate,  obcordate,  or  cuneate,  from 
under  3 to  nearly  5 lines  long,  glabrous  above,  hoary  or  silky  underneath. 
Flowers  small,  in  distant  pairs,  in  long  slender  terminal  racemes.  Calyx  about 
1 line  long,  with  very  short  teeth.  Standard  nearly  3 lines  diameter.  Pod  l^in. 
long  or  more,  narrow,  usually  incurved  towards  the  end,  glabrous  or  slightly 
pubescent.  Seeds  more  or  less  transversely  oblong. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  Endeavour  River  and  Bustard  Bay, 
Banks  and  Solander ; Broadsound , R.  Broicn  ; Gould  Island,  M‘Gillivray  ; Wide  Bay,  Bid  will ; 
Rockhampton,  Thozet;  Elliott  River,  Bowman;  also  in  Leichhardt's  collection. 

10.  T.  filipes  (thread-like  racemes),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  208.  A perennial, 
with  slender  diffuse  or  ascending  branching  stems,  rarely  above  1ft.  long,  minutely 
silky-hoary.  Leaflets  7 to  15,  narrow-oblong  or  linear,  those  of  the  lower  leaves 
obtuse,  of  the  upper  leaves  acute  with  straight  or  recurved  points,  all  rather  rigid, 
glabrous  above.  Racemes  filiform,  1 or  rarely  2in.  long,  with  usually  only  2 
distant  pairs  of  small  flowers,  or  the  terminal  ones  more  rigid,  leafy  at  the  base. 
Pedicels  longer  than  the  calyx.  Calyx  about  1 line  long,  including  the  short 
teeth.  Standard  about  3 lines  diameter.  Style  flattened.  Pod  about  lin.  long, 
straight,  glabrous  or  nearly  so.  Seeds  orbicular. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Browne,  Henne ; Croydon,  R.  C.  Burton; 
Northumberland  Islands,  R.  Brown;  Dawson  River,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Endeavour  River  and  Percy 
Island,  A.  Cunningham;  May  Day  Island,  Armstrong;  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill;  Erythrina  Creek, 
Leichhardt ; Brisbane  River,  and  many  other  southern  localities.  Flowering  in  December. 

Var.  latifolia.  Leaflets  cuneate-oblong,  silky  underneath.— Endeavour  River,  Banks  and 
Solander. 

11.  T.  oligophylla  (leaflets  few),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  209.  Rootstock 
woody,  with  ascending  stems  of  £ to  1ft.,  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent.  Leaflets 
1,  3,  or  rarely  5,  broadly  oblong-cuneate  to  narrow-oblong,  f to  l^in.  long,  obtuse 
or  retuse  with  a small  point,  glabrous  or  sprinkled  underneath  with  a few  hairs, 
the  primary  veins  not  so  close  as  in  most  species.  Flowers  usually  numerous, 
rather  large,  the  racemes  not  very  long.  Bracts  subulate,  persistent.  Pedicels 
short.  Calyx-tube  nearly  glabrous,  about  1 line  long,  the  teeth  rather  longer, 
subulate-acuminate.  Standard  fully  4 lines  diameter  ; keel  much  curved,  obtuse. 
Style  flattened.  Pod  straight  or  slightly  recurved  (not  incurved),  about  lin.  long, 
glabrous  or  nearly  so.  Seeds  orbicular. 

Hab.:  Cape  York,  M'Gillivray  ; Albany  Island,  F.  v,  Mueller, 


Tephrosia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSflE. 


395 


12.  T.  purpurea  (flowers  purple),  Pers.;  W.  and  Am.  Prod.  218  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  209.  A perennial  or  undershrub  of  1 to  2ft.,  with  spreading  or  decum- 
bent branches,  glabrous,  hoary  or  pubescent.  Leaflets  usually  7 to  11,  oblong- 
cuneate  or  linear,  obtuse  or  with  a small  recurved  point,  J to  lin.  long,  glabrous 
above,  hoary  or  silky  underneath.  Racemes  terminal  or  leaf-opposed,  the  lower 
ones  often  very  short,  the  upper  ones  6in.  long  or  more,  with  distant  fascicles  of 
2 to  4 pinkish  flowers.  Calyx  minutely  pubescent,  the  tube  about  1 line  long, 
the  lobes  subulate-pointed,  variable  in  length.  Standard  about  4 lines  diameter, 
keel  obtuse.  Upper  stamen  slightly  cohering  with  the  others  in  the  bud,  but 
very  soon  quite  free.  Style  much  flattened.  Pod  glabrous  or  pubescent,  about 
lfin.  long,  more  or  less  falcate.  Seeds  transversely  oblong. — T.  Baueri,  Benth. 
in  A.  Gray,  Bot.  Amer.  Expl.  Exped.  i.  408. 

Hab.:  Bowen  River,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan. 

This  species  is  very  common  in  tropical  Asia  and  E.  tropical  Africa,  where  it  varies  consider- 
ably as  to  stature,  length  of  raceme,  indumentum,  &c.,  but  where  the  calyx-lobes  are  always 
subulate  and  longer  than  the  tube.  Among  the  Australian  specimens,  those  above  quoted  are 
the  only  ones  I have  seen  agreeing  in  this  respect  as  well  as  in  foliage  with  the  Asiatic  ones. 
The  following  forms,  which  are  probably  varieties  of  the  same  species,  do  not  nevertheless 
appear  to  be  represented  out  of  Australia. — Benth. 

Var.  brevidens.  More  shrubby  and  erect,  with  the  habit  of  the  Pacific  Island  variety  usually 
named  T.  piseatoria,  Pers.;  hoary  with  a minute  appressed  pubescence.  Leaflets  mostly  9 to 
15.  Racemes  usually  very  long.  Calyx-teeth  very  short  or  the  lowest  nearly  as  long  as  the 
tube. — Various  points  of  the  N.  and  E.  coasts,  islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown ; 
Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander  ; Cape  Upstart,  M'Gillivray;  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill ; Percy 
Island,  A.  Cunningham. 

Var.  rufescens.  Habit  of  the  var.  brevidens , but  the  branches  densely  and  softly  rusty-villous. 
Leaflets  more  numerous,  often  above  20.  Racemes  long  and  many-flowered.  Calyx-teeth  short 
as  in  the  var.  brevidens. — Rocky  hills,  Gorman  Creek,  Moreton  Bay,  Enoggera,  C.  Stuart;  Port 
Bowen,  A.  Cunningham;  Archer’s  Hill,  Leichhardt. 

Var.  longifolia.  Leaflets  very  narrow,  obtuse  acute  or  mucronate,  often  1 to  2in.  long. 
Racemes  long.  Calyx-teeth  subulate,  but  rather  short.— Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown,  Lands- 
borough  ; Depot  Creek,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Albert  River,  Henne. 

Var.  sericea.  Leaflets  numerous,  narrow,  acute,  silky  underneath.  Calyx-teeth  short.- - 
Broadsound,  R.'Broicn,  Bowen;  Charters  Towers,  C.  F.  Plant. 

Var.  (?)  laxa.  Stems  loosely  decumbent.  Leaflets  few,  broad,  loosely  pubescent  or  villous,  the 
veins  parallel  above,  almost  reticulate  underneath.  Calyx-teeth  subulate,  but  very  short. — - 
Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown,  Henne. 

13.  T.  Bidwilli  (after  J.  C.  Bidwill),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  210.  Rootstock 
woody,  with  ascending  or  erect  stems  of  1 to  2ft.,  more  or  less  pubescent.  Leaflets 
in  the  lower  leaves  3 or  5,  oblong  or  lanceolate,  in  the  others  7 to  11,  linear  or 
linear-lanceolate,  acutely  acuminate,  1 to  2 or  even  3in.  long,  narrowed  at  the 
base,  in  distant  pairs  along  a slender  rigid  petiole,  green  on  both  sides,  but  slightly 
pubescent  underneath.  Racemes  usually  on  long  peduncles,  the  lower  pairs  of 
flowers  distant.  Calyx  densely  rusty-pubescent,  the  tube  about  1|  line  long,  the 
lobes  longer,  incurved,  narrow,  but  not  subulate,  the  2 upper  ones  united  above 
the  middle.  Standard  fully  5 lines  broad ; keel  much  incurved,  almost  acute. 
Style  much  flattened.  Pod  1J  to  2in.  long,  slightly  incurved,  softly  pubescent. 
Seeds  transversely  oblong. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill ; Burnett  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Darling  Downs. 

Var.  (?)  densa.  Leaflets  shorter  and  more  silky ; inflorescence  dense,  but  with  the  calyx  of 
T.  Bidwilli.  1 

14.  T.  rosea  (Rose-coloured),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  211.  A 
perennial  or  undershrub,  with  ascending  branches,  closely  but  rather  densely 
silky-tomentose.  Leaflets  usually  5 or  7,  oblong-cuneate  or  obovate-oblong,  very 
obtuse  or  retuse,  green  and  slightly  pubescent  above,  silky  underneath.  Racemes 
long  and  rather  rigid.  Flowers  small,  in  clusters  of  2 or  3.  Pedicels  usually 
shorter  than  the  calyx.  Calyx  silky  tomentose,  the  tube  about  1 line  long,  the 


396 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Tephrosia. 


teeth  or  lobes  about  as  long.  Standard  about  3 lines  diameter,  the  claw  short. 
Style  much  flattened.  Pod  narrow,  densely  silky  pubescent,  much  curved,  the 
sutures  scarcely  thickened,  the  valves  very  convex.  Seeds  transversely  oblong. 
Hab.:  Gulf  country. 

Var.  (?)  angustifolia.  Leaflets  linear,  elongated.  Pod  softly  villous. — Cooper’s  Creek,  Dr.  T. 
L.  Bancroft. 


34.  MILLETTIA,  W.  and  Arn. 

(After  Dr.  Millet.) 

Calyx  broad,  truncate  or  with  short  teeth  or  lobes,  the  2 upper  ones  often 
united.  Standard  broad,  usually  reflexed;  keel  incurved,  obtuse.  Upper  stamen 
free  or  cohering  with  the  others  in  the  middle  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile 
or  rarely  stipitate,  surrounded  at  the  base  by  an  angular  or  cup-shaped  disk,  with 
several  ovules  ; style  inflexed,  terete,  glabrous,  with  a small  terminal  stigma. 
Poci  broadly  linear-lanceolate  or  oblong,  flat  and  hard,  or  if  convex  thick  and 
woody,  opening  at  length  in  two  valves.  Seeds  orbicular  or  reniform,  not 
strophiolate. — Trees,  tall  shrubs,  or  woody  climbers.  Leaves  unequally  pinnate  ; 
leaflets  penniveined  with  reticulate  veinlets,  usually  stipellate.  Stipules  small. 
Racemes  terminal  or  paniculate  at  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Flowers  usually 
purple,  pink  or  white,  clustered  or  scattered  along  the  rhachis.  Bracts  and 
bracteoles  usually  very  deciduous. 

A large  genus,  ranging  over  the  warmer  regions  of  Asia  and  Africa,  with  3 endemic  Australian 
species.  Benthamsays:  It  differs  from  the  North  American  and  Japanese  genus  Wistaria,  only 
in  the  hard,  usually  flat  or  thick  pod,  not  opening  so  readily,  although  not  absolutely  indehiscent 
as  in  the  Dalbergiea. 

Plant  hoary-pubescent.  Pods  dehiscent,  large,  the  outside  densely  velvety 


and  ribbed  ; integument  of  seed  very  loose 1.  M.  megasperma. 

Plants  silky-pubescent.  Pod  tardily  dehiscent,  hard,  woody,  nearly  glabrous  ; 

integument  of  seed  closely  adherent 2.  M.  Maideniana. 

Plant  glabrous  or  nearly  so.  Flowers  on  very  hairy  pedicels.  Bracts  and 

bracteoles  prominent 3.  M.  pilipes. 


1.  M.  megasperma  (large-seeded),  F.  v.  M.  (under  Wistaria)  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  211.  A tall  evergreen  woody  climber,  glabrous  except  a slight  hoari- 
ness on  the  young  shoots  and  panicles.  Leaflets  7 to  13,  obovate  or  obovate- 
oblong,  shortly  acuminate,  If  to  2in.  long,  somewhat  coriaceous  and  green  on 
both  sides.  Racemes  4 to  6in.  long,  several  in  a terminal  almost  leafless  panicle. 
Flowers  scattered,  purple.  Calyx  about  2f  lines  long,  the  lobes  nearly  as  long  as 
the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  into  a very  broad  truncate  upper  lip.  Standard 
above  fin.  broad,  minutely  silky-pubescent,  with  a slightly  prominent  transverse 
callous  appendage  inside  above  the  claw.  Upper  stamen  quite  free.  Ovary 
stipitate.  Pod  about  Gin.  long,  thick,  hard,  almost  woody,  densely  velvety  out- 
side. Seeds  red,  large  and  thick. — Wistaria  megasperma , F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  10. 

Hab.:  Pine  River,  near  Moreton  Bay,  IF.  Hill,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Nurrum-Nurrum  Creek, 
Leichhardt ; not  uncommon  in  the  southern  scrubs. 

The  gum  contains  78  per  cent,  of  tannin.  Maiden  ; 75  per  cent,  according  to  Lauterer;  and 
20  per  cent,  of  water,  Maiden  and  Lauterer. 

2.  1YE.  Maideniana  (after  J.  H.  Maiden,  F.L.S.),  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  No.  v. 
(1892).  Branchlets  striate  and  clothed  with  appressed  silky  hairs.  Leaves  about  Gin. 
long,  petioles  slender ; leaflets  11  to  13,  narrow,  oblong  or  lanceolate,  the  largest 
about  2in.  long,  fin.  broad,  on  petiolules  under  2 lines  long,  which  with  the 
midribs  and  rhachis  are  covered  with  stiff  appressed  setaceous  hairs.  Stipules 
fugacious,  and  all  fallen  from  the  specimen  examined ; stipellae  minute,  setaceous, 
hairy,  persistent  at  the  upper  leaflets  ; upper  surface  of  leaflets  dark-green,  the 
under  pale-coloured  ; reticulation  very  fine  and  close,  but  scarcely  visible  except 
with  the  aid  of  a lens.  Inflorescence  in  terminal  panicles  about  7in.  long,  the 


Millettia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


397 


branches  racemose,  bearing  more  or  less  scattered  purple  flowers.  Pedicels  about 
4 lines  long,  hairy.  Calyx  silky,  about  2^  lines  long,  deeply  lobed  ; standard  £ 
to  nearly  fin.  broad,  much  broader  than  long,  grey,  with  silky  hairs  on  the  back, 
the  face  deep-purple  and  bearing  a semicircular  wing-like  callosity  just  above  the 
very  short  claw  ; wing  and  keel  petals  falcate-oblong,  free  except  near  the  apex. 
Upper  stamen  quite  free,  with  a callous  swelling  about  a third  up  from  the  base 
where  it  comes  in  contact  with  the  others,  the  free  ends  of  the  joined  ones  fili- 
form, all  glabrous ; anthers  minute.  Ovary  sessile,  silky-hairy.  Style  inflexed, 
glabrous.  Pod  Bin.  long,  almost  terete  and  lfin.  diameter,  oblong,  minutely 
tuberculose,  chick,  hard,  and  woody,  the  thin  endocarp  separating  from  the 
epicarp,  with  a follicular  aestivation.  Seeds  2,  brown,  hard,  and  polished, 
about  7 lines  long  and  nearly  as  thick,  irregularly  angled,  hilum  as  long  as 
the  seed. 

Hab.:  Port  Macquarie,  communicated  by  Mr.  J.  H.  Maiden.  With  the  above  was  also  a pod 
gathered  at  Murwillumbah,  evidently  belonging  to  the  same  species  ; this  pod,  however,  was  Tin. 
long,  tapering  at  each  end  ; nearly  terete,  indehiscent,  slightly  over  lin.  diameter,  showing  a 
slight  pubescence  at  the  contractions  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  precisely  like  those  in  the  short 
obtuse  pod  above  described.  The  difference  of  the  pods  alone  is  quite  sufficient  to  distinguish 
this  species  from  the  only  other  species  met  with  in  the  northern  parts  of  New  South  Wales  and 
southern  Queensland  of  which  the  fruit  is  known — M.  megasperma,  the  outside  of  whose  pods 
closely  resembles  corduroy  ; the  outer  coating  of  the  seeds  also  of  this  species  cracks  and  peels  off 
in  fragments.  It  is  probable  that  in  a fresh  or  early  state  the  pods  of  the  new  species  may  be 
pubescent,  and  that  it  had  been  rubbed  off  the  two  pods  examined.  I have  more  than  once 
received  loose  seed  of  this  new  species  from  persons  who  had  picked  them  up  in  the  scrubs  of 
our  southern  border  towards  the  Tweed  River,  so  have  given  the  plant  in  the  Queensland  Flora. 

8.  M.  pilipes  (hairy  pedicels),  Bail.  Add.  to  3rd  Suppl.  Syn.  Ql.  FI.  A 
tall  woody  climber,  glabrous  except  the  inflorescence.  Leaves  alternate,  pinnate, 
of  2 or  more  pairs  of  pinnas ; pinnte  oblong-lanceolate,  about  2in.  long,  the 
margins  undulate ; petiolules  rugose,  2 or  8 lines  long ; primary  veins  few, 
distant,  and  with  the  smaller  reticulations  rather  prominent  on  both  faces. 
Inflorescence  in  terminal  racemose  panicles  of  brownish-pink  flowers,  the  main 
and  secondary  rhachises  downy.  Bracts  ovate-lanceolate,  about  ^in.  long. 
Pedicels  slender,  about  fin.  long,  clothed  with  light-brown  spreading  hairs ; 
bracteole  narrow-linear  at  top  of  pedicel.  Calyx  about  2^  lines  long,  campanu- 
late,  nearly  glabrous  ; lobes  attenuated,  about  as  long  as  the  cup,  the  two  inner 
ones  joined  into  one ; margins  ciliate.  Standard  nearly  orbicular,  about  ^in. 
diameter,  with  a callous  appendage  at  the  top  of  the  claw  ; claw  short,  slightly 
hairy  on  the  back,  the  wing  and  keel  petals  coherent  at  the  obtuse  points,  with 
sharp  auricles  at  the  base  ; claws  slender.  Stamens  diadelphous,  upper  one  free. 
Ovary  tomentose,  nearly  or  quite  sessile.  Style  glabrous,  incurved ; stigma 
small ; disk  a crenulate,  glabrous,  short  sheath.  Pod  not  seen. 

Hab.:  Johnstone  River,  Dr.  Thos.  L.  Bancroft. 


35.  SESBANIA,  Pers. 

(The  Arabic  name  of  one  species.) 

(Agati,  De. sv.) 

Calyx-tube  broad,  truncate,  or  with  nearly  equal  teeth  or  lobes.  Standard 
orbicular  or  ovate,  spreading  or  reflexed  ; keel  incurved,  obtuse  or  acuminate,  the 
claws  much  longer  than  those  of  the  other  petals.  Upper  stamen  free,  geniculate 
near  the  base,  the  others  united  in  a sheath  angled  near  the  base  ; anthers 
uniform  or  nearly  so.  Ovary  with  several  ovules ; style  glabrous,  with  a small 
terminal  stigma.  Pod  long  and  linear  (or  in  some  species  not  Australian  oblong), 
2-valved  or  indehiscent,  the  endocarp  continuous  with  spurious  transverse  parti- 
tions separating  the  seeds.  Seeds  without  any  strophiole. — Herbs  or  shrubs, 
sometimes  arborescent,  but  of  very  few  years’  duration.  Leaves  abruptly  pinnate, 


398 


XLI1I.  LEGUMINOS-fE. 


[Sesbania. 


with  numerous  entire  leaflets,  the  stipellse  minute  or  none.  Stipules  setaceous, 
usually  very  deciduous.  Flowers  yellow,  red,  variegated  or  white,  in  short  loose 
axillary  racemes  ; pedicels  slender.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  very  rarely  persistent 
to  the  time  of  flowering. 

The  genus  is  widely  spread  over  the  tropical  regions  both  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World. 


Flowers  very  large  (nearly  3in.  long),  the  petals  narrowed  at  the  end  . . . 1.  S.  grandiflora. 

Flowers  not  lin.  long.  Petals  broad. 

Racemes  pendulous.  Stem  shrubby 2.  S.  agyptiaca. 

Racemes  erect.  Stem  herbaceous.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  very  deciduous. 

Calyx-teeth  very  short 3.  S.  aculeata. 


1.  S.  grandiflora  (large-flowered),  Pers.  Syn.  PL  ii.  316  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  212.  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree  of  very  few  years’  duration,  glabrous  and 
more  or  less  glaucous.  Leaflets  10  to  30  pairs,  oblong  or  elliptical,  obtuse  and 
often  mucronate,  1 to  l-|in.  long.  Racemes  short,  with  2 to  4 very  large  flowers, 
white  in  Australian  specimens.  Calyx-tube  Jin.  long,  without  the  turbinate 
base,  the  teeth  or  lobes  short  and  broad.  Petals  2 to  nearly  3in.  long;  standard 
ovate,  rather  shorter  than  the  others ; keel  much  incurved,  ending  in  an  obtuse 
beak.  Pod  upwards  of  a foot  long,  nearly  3 lines  broad. — Agati  grandiflora, 
Desv.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  266;  W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  215  ; A.  formosa,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm. 
ii.  88. 

Hab.:  Said  to  have  been  found  either  at  the  top  of  Cape  York  Peninsula  or  the  islands  of  Torres 
Straits. 

The  red-flowered  variety,  S.  coccinea,  Pers.  l.c.,  or  Agati  coccinea,  Desv.,  is  not  amongst  the 
Australian  species  I have  seen.  Both  varieties  are  frequent  in  India,  but  perhaps  only  about 
villages  and  other  places  where  they  have  been  planted ; they  both  appear  to  be  really  indigenous 
in  the  Archipelago.  The  size  of  the  flowers  with  the  petals  narrower  in  proportion  has  induced 
the  separation  of  this  species  as  a genus,  but  there  is  no  other  character  to  distinguish  it  from 
Sesbania.  The  Sandwich  Island  S.  tomentosa  (Agati  tomentosa,  Nutt.)  is  quite  intermediate 
between  the  two. — Benth. 

2.  S.  aegyptiaca  (Egyptian),  Pers.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  264  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 

ii.  212.  “ Ngeen -jerry,”  Cloncurry,  Palmer.  A shrub  of  5 or  6ft.,  becoming,  in 

India  at  least,  a tree  of  twice  that  size,  but  of  very  few  years’  duration,  glabrous 
and  somewhat  glaucous,  the  branches  terete  or  obscurely  angled.  Leaflets  usually 
under  20  and  often  not  10  pairs,  oblong,  obtuse,  4 to  8 lines  long  or  when 
luxuriant  nearly  lin.  Flowers  rather  large,  yellow  or  with  a purple  vexillum,  in 
loose  pendulous  racemes,  shorter  than  the  leaves.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  very 
deciduous.  Calyx  about  3 lines  long,  without  the  narrow-turbinate  almost  stalk- 
like base,  the  teeth  very  short  and  broad.  Standard  about  Jin.  broad ; keel 
much  incurved,  broad,  obtuse,  with  an  acute  angle  at  the  base.  Pod  when  perfect 
8 to  lOin.  long  and  2 to  2J  lines  broad,  but  often  much  shorter  by  the  abortion 
of  many  of  the  ovules. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  214  ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  32  ; S.  picta, 
Pers.;  Bot.  Reg.  t.  873. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  other  northern  localities. 

This  species  is  common  in  tropical  Asia  and  Africa. 

When  dry  the  natives  use  two  pieces  of  the  same  plant  for  fire-drills;  stems  are  used  for  the 
ends  of  reed-spears. — Palmer. 

3.  S.  aculeata  (prickly),  Pers.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  265;  Benth.  PI.  Austr.  ii.  213. 
An  erect  herb,  usually  of  4 to  5ft.,  but  sometimes  twice  that  size,  glabrous  or 
the  young  shoots  slightly  pubescent,  the  branches  terete  or  slightly  angular. 
Leaflets  from  20  to  nearly  50  pairs,  narrow-oblong,  obtuse,  mucronate,  4 to  8 
lines  long,  on  a common  petiole  often  ^ to  1ft.  long  and  sometimes  armed  with 
small  tubercles  or  prickles,  which  are  however  often  very  minute  or  quite  wanting. 
Flowers  yellow,  much  smaller  than  in  S.  aegyptiaca,  in  loose  erect  racemes  shorter 
than  the  leaves.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  very  deciduous.  Calyx  about  2J  lines 


Sesbania .] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^. 


899 


long,  including  the  short  turbinate  base,  the  teeth  short,  broad,  and  acute. 
Standard  scarcely  Jin.  broad  ; keel  very  much  incurved,  broadly  obtuse  in  front. 
Pod  long,  narrower  than  in  S.  cegyptiaca,  the  sutures  more  thickened. — W.  and 
Arn.  Prod.  214 ; S.  australis,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  i.  36. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Landsborough,  also  M'Kinlay’s  Expedition;  in  the  interior, 
Mitchell  ; Rockhampton,  Dallachy. 

Var.  sericea.  Young  branches  and  foliage  silky-pubescent. — N.W.  coast,  Bynoe  ; Nichol  Bay, 
F.  Gregory's  Expedition ; Sturt’s  Creek  and  Flinder’s  River,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; islands  of  the  Gulf 
of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. — Bentli. 

Var.  (?)  erubescens.  Flowers  rather  longer,  the  standard  pinkish.  Branches  more  angular. — 
Sturt’s  Creek,  F.  v.  Mueller.  This  may  possibly  be  near  S.  punctata,  Pers.,  which,  however,  is 
scarcely  specifically  distinct  from  S.  aculeata.  Fragments  from  Gulf  country  may  belong  to  this 
variety. 


36.  CLIANTHUS,  Soland. 

(Glory-flower.) 

(Donia,  G.  Don.) 

Calyx-teeth  nearly  equal.  Standard  acuminate,  closely  reflexed  over  the  calyx  ; 
wings  shorter,  lanceolate  ; keel  about  as  long  as  the  standard,  erect,  incurved, 
acute.  Upper  stamen  free,  the  others  united  in  a sheath  ; anthers  reniform. 
Ovary  stipitate,  with  many  ovules ; style  subulate,  incurved,  longitudinally 
bearded  along  the  inside  towards  the  end  ; stigma  minute,  terminal.  Pod  turgid, 
oblong-acuminate,  2-valved.  Seeds  reniform,  not  strophiolate. — Herbs  or  under- 
shrubs. Leaves  pinnate.  Stipules  herbaceous.  Flowers  large,  red,  in  short 
axillary  racemes. 

Besides  the  Australian  species,  which  is  endemic,  the  genus  comprises  one  other  from  New 
Zealand.  The  Norfolk  Island  climber,  described  as  C.  carneus,  forms  the  very  distinct  genus 
Streblorhiza,  Endl. — Benth. 

1.  C.  Sampieri  (after  Wm.  Dampier),  A.  Gunn,  in  Trans.  Hort.  Soc.  Lond. 
ser.  2,  i.  522  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  214.  A perennial,  with  stout  procumbent  or 
ascending  stems,  of  2ft.  or  more,  densely  villous,  with  long  soft  hairs.  Leaflets 
about  15  to  21,  obovate-elliptical  or  oblong,  obtuse  or  almost  acute,  mostly  J to 
to  lin.  long,  nearly  glabrous  above,  villous  underneath.  Stipules  broad,  embracing 
the  stem.  Peduncles  rarely  exceeding  the  leaves,  bearing  a short  dense  almost 
umbel-like  raceme  of  large  red  pendulous  flowers.  Bracts  lanceolate.  Pedicels 
about  Jin.  long,  with  short  linear  bracteoles.  Calyx  hirsute,  nearly  fin.  long,  the 
lobes  lanceolate  acuminate,  longer  than  the  tube.  Standard  2Jin.  long,  with  a 
deep-purple  or  black  shining  blotch  at  the  base ; wings  ljin.  long,  acute ; keel 
nearly  as  long  as  the  standard.  Pod  narrow-oblong,  2 to  2Jin.  long,  coriaceous, 
the  seminal  suture  indented,  softly  pubescent  outside,  glabrous  inside.  Seeds 
small  and  numerous. — R.  Br.  in  App.  Sturt,  Voy.  8 ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  5051  ; Lindl. 
in  Paxt.  FI.  Gard.  t.  10  ; C.  Oxleyi,  A.  Cunn.  in  Trans.  Hort.  Soc.  l.c.;  Donia 
speciosa  and  D.  forrnusa,  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  468. 

Hab.:  Warrego. 


37.  SWAIN  SON  A,  Salisb. 

(After  Mr.  W.  Swainson,  the  zoologist.) 

(Cyclogyne,  Benth.;  Diplolobium,  F.  v.  M.) 

Calyx-teeth  nearly  equal.  Standard  nearly  orbicular,  on  a short  claw ; wings 
oblong,  falcate  or  slightly  twisted,  free  ; keel  broad,  incurved,  obtuse  or  produced 
into  a twisted  beak.  Upper  stamen  entirely  free,  the  others  united  in  a sheath  ; 
anthers  reniform.  Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate,  with  many  ovules  ; style  incurved, 
subulate  or  curled  inwards  at  the  end,  more  or  less  longitudinally  bearded  along 
the  inner  edge,  the  stigma  small  or  inconspicuous  at  or  near  the  end.  Pod  either 
ovoid  membranous  and  inflated  ; or  narrow  and  coriaceous,  but  turgid,  the  upper 


400 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[Swaimona. 


suture  occasionally  impressed,  or  the  pod  divided  by  a longitudinal  partition. 
Seeds  usually  small,  reniform,  without  any  strophiole. — Herbs  or  undershrubs, 
glabrous  or  clothed,  especially  the  young  shoots,  with  short  rather  rigid  appressed 
hairs.  Leaves  unequally  pinnate,  leaflets  usually  numerous,  small,  entire, 
without  stipelte.  Stipules  herbaceous,  oblique  with  a broad  base,  rarely  almost 
subulate.  Flowers  violet-purple,  blue,  red,  white  or  yellowish,  in  axillary 

racemes.  Bracts  membranous,  usually  small.  Bracteoles  sometimes  close  to 

the  calyx  and  persistent,  sometimes  on  the  pedicel,  and  very  small  or  none. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia,  with  the  exception  of  a single  New  Zealand  species. 
The  European  and  Asiatic  Coluteas  are,  however,  only  to  be  distinguished  by  their  shrubby 
habit  and  large  prominent  lateral  stigma,  and  the  S.  African  Lessertias  are  some  of  them 
so  near  to  S.  lessertiifolia  (S.  colonies)  and  its  allies  as  to  make  it  very  difficult  to  draw  any 
but  a geographical  line  between  the  two  genera. — Benth. 

A.  Standard  with  prominent  oblique  or  longitudinal  plate-like  calli  above  the  claw.  Pod 


stipitate , thin,  inflated. 

Style  bearded  only  along  the  inner  side.  Flowers  large.  Pod  acute,  1 to 
2in.  long. 

Calyx  densely  white-tomentose 1.  S.  Greyana. 

Calyx  glabrous,  or  nearly  so 2 . S.  galegifolia . 

Style  with  a tuft  of  small  hairs  behind  the  stigma  on  the  back,  l esides  the 

longitudinal  beard.  Pod  under  Jin.  long.  Flowers  small 3.  S.  brachycarpa. 


B.  Standard  with  transverse  or  confluent  callosities  on  the  top  of  or  close  above  the  claw,  or  the 
top  of  the  claw  much  thickened.  Pod  sessile  or  nearly  so,  turgid,  often  coriaceous. 

Keel  incurved,  but  neither  twisted  nor  oblique.  Style  slender.  Ovary  silky- 
villous. 

Leaflets  usually  more  than  9.  Calyx-lobes  lanceolate.  Plant  hoary  or 
almost  mealy-pubescent.  Leaflets  linear  or  oblong.  Flowers  large, 

few,  on  long  peduncles 4.  S.  phacoides. 

Leaflets  usually  under  9.  Calyx-lobes  subulate  or  very  short.  Plants 
usually  low  or  procumbent. 

Plant  slightly  hoary.  Leaflets  obovate.  Flowers  small,  few,  in  short 

racemes 5.  S.  oligophylla. 

Plant  glabrous  or  slightly  hoary.  Leaflets  lanceolate  or  linear,  apute. 

Flowers  few,  in  short  racemes 10.  S.  oroboides. 

Keel  oblique  or  laterally  twisted.  Style  firm,  readily  twisting.  Ovary 
glabrous  or  nearly  so.  Leaflets  few,  lanceolate,  acute.  Ovary  quite 
sessile 6.  S.  campylantha. 

C.  Standard  without  any  callosities,  the  claw  usually  short,  broad  and  thin.  Pod  various. 


Keel  spirally  twisted,  without  callosities.  Pod  sessile,  oblong.  Standard  f 
to  lin.  broad.  Pod  above  lin.  long,  the  upper  suture  intruded,  but  not 
completely  dividing  it 7.  S.  procumbens. 

Leaflets  shorter,  broader,  and  more  frequently  hirsute.  Flowers  smaller, 

the  keel  less  twisted.  Pod  shorter  and  more  turgid 8.  S.  oncinotropis. 

Keel  neither  twisted  nor  callous. 

Style  firm,  flattened,  hooked  or  inflexed  at  the  end,  bearded  only  along 
the  inner  side.  Plant  hoary  or  mealy.  Leaflets  narrow.  Stipules 
broad 9.  S.  phacifolia. 

Style  slender,  not  hooked,  bearded  only  along  the  inner  side. 

Racemes  pedunculate,  exceeding  the  leaves. 


Pod  rarely  under  fin.  long.  Keel  very  obtuse.  Leaflets  3,  5,  or 


rarely  7,  lanceolate,  acute.  Standard  with  a rather  thick  narrow 

claw.  Calyx  rarely  with  black  hairs 10.  S.  oroboides. 

Pod  less  than  Jin.  long.  Flowers  small.  Keel  much  incurved. 

Leaflets  small  or  narrow 11.  S.  monticola. 

Racemes  few-flowered,  much  shorter  than  the  leaves.  Flowers  very 

small 12.  S.  luteola. 


Style  slender,  not  hooked,  with  a tuft  of  hairs  at  the  end  on  the  back 
behind  the  stigma,  besides  the  longitudinal  beard,  which  is  often 


slight. 

Ovary  and  pod  sessile. 

Leaflets  linear,  acute,  lin.  long  or  more 13.  S.  parviflora. 

Leaflets  obcordate  or  cuneate-emarginate,  under  4 lines  long  . . .14.  S.  microphylla. 


Swainsona.\ 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


401 


Ovary  and  pod  distinctly  stipitate. 

Flowers  purple  or  whitish.  Pod  above  lin.  long,  on  stipes  much 

longer  than  the  calyx 15.  S.  Fraseri. 

Flowers  yellow.  Pod  about  Jin.  long,  on  a stipes  not  exceeding  the 

calyx 16.  S.  laxa. 

1.  S.  Crreyana  (after  Capt.  [Sir]  George  Grey),  Lindl.  Bot.  II eg.  1846,  t. 

66;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  216.  A perennial  or  undershrub,  with  erect  or 

ascending  stems  of  2 to  3ft.,  the  young  shoots  and  leaves  white-tomentose, 
becoming  glabrous  when  full-grown.  Leaflets  11  to  21,  oblong  obtuse  or  refuse, 
f to  lin.  or  sometimes  ljdn.  long.  Flowers  large,  pink,  in  long  erect  pedunculate 
racemes.  Bracts  ovate  or  lanceolate.  Pedicels  shorter  than  the  calyx.  Brac- 
teoles  close  to  the  calyx  and  often  as  long  as  its  tube.  Calyx  densely  cottony- 
white,  3 to  4 lines  long,  the  teeth  short.  Standard  fin.  diameter,  with  2 
prominent  erect  plate-like  calli  above  the  claw  ; wings  shorter ; keel  incurved, 
obtuse,  not  so  broad  as  in  S.  galegifolia.  Pod  inflated,  membranous,  attaining  If 
to  2in.,  on  a stipes  of  f to  fin. — Bot.  Mag.  t.  4416  ; S.  grandiflora,  R,  Br.  in  App. 
Sturt  Exped.  11. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  in  F.  v.  Mueller’s  Census  Austr.  Plants. 

The  precise  form  and  proportions  of  the  teeth  of  the  calyx  and  bracteoles  prove  too  variable  to 
admit  of  distinguishing,  even  as  constant  varieties,  the  two  forms  described  by  R.  Brown. — Benth. 

2.  S.  galegifolia  (Galega-leaved),  R.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew  ed.  2,  iii.  327; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  217.  Darling  Pea.  A glabrous  perennial  or  undershrub,  with 
erect  flexuose  branches,  sometimes  under  1ft.,  sometimes  ascending  or  even 
climbing  to  the  height  of  several  feet.  Leaflets  11  to  21  or  rarely  more,  oblong, 
obtuse  or  emarginate,  mostly  4 to  8 lines  long.  Stipules  small,  reflexed.  Racemes 
pedunculate,  exceeding  the  leaves  and  sometimes  twice  as  long.  Flowers  rather 
large,  deep  red  in  the  original  variety.  Pedicels  rarely  longer  than  the  calyx, 
with  minute  bracteoles  near  the  top.  Calyx  glabrous,  2f  to  3 lines  long,  the  lobes 
acute,  short  or  nearly  as  long  as  the  tube.  Standard  6 to  8 lines  diameter,  with 
2 oblique  or  almost  longitudinal  plate-like  prominent  callosities  above  the 
claw  ; wings  shorter ; keel  broad,  obtuse.  Style  subulate,  acute,  not  indexed  at 
the  end,  bearded  longitudinally  without  any  terminal  tuft.  Pod  much  inflated, 
membranous,  1 to  2in.  long,  on  a stipes  varying  from  2 to  6 lines. — DC.  Prod.  ii. 
271  ; Vicia  galegifolia,  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  319  ; Colutea  galegifolia,  Sims,  Bot. 
Mag.  t.  792  ; S.  Oshornii,  Moore,  in  Gard.  Comp.  t.  65,  copied  into  Lemair.  Jard. 
Fleur,  t.  304. 

Hab.:  Shoalwater  Bay,  R.  Brown ; Moreton  Bay,  Fraser ; Wide  Bay,  Bidwill,  Leichhardt ; 
Peak  Downs,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Mantuan  Downs  and  Balonne  River,  Mitchell ; Burdekin  River, 
Fitzalan;  plains  of  the  Condamine,  Leichhardt. 

The  species  varies  with  light  purplish-pink  flowers,  S.  coronillcefolia,  Salisb.  Parad.  Lond.  t. 
28;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  271;  Bot.  Reg.  t.  1725;  and  with  white  flowers,  Bot.  Reg.  t.  994;  S.  albiflora, 
G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  245  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1642.  The  differences  in  the  length  of  the  stipes 
of  the  pod  do  not,  as  had  been  supposed,  coincide  with  the  differences  in  the  colour  of  the  flower. 
— Benth. 

This  and  other  species  of  the  genus  are  said  to  be  poisonous  to  stock. 

3.  S.  brachycarpa  (short-fruited),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  217.  A perennial, 
glabrous  or  nearly  so,  with  the  habit  of  8.  galegifolia,  but  much  smaller  and  more 
slender.  Leaflets  numerous,  oblong,  mostly  narrow,  2 to  3 or  rarely  4 lines  long. 
Stipules  small.  Racemes  on  long  peduncles  exceeding  the  leaves.  Flowers 
small,  apparently  purple  or  red.  Pedicels  about  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Calyx 
scarcely  above  1 line  long,  broad  with  short  acute  teeth.  Standard  about  5 lines 
diameter,  with  the  oblique  almost  longitudinal  plate-like  appendages  of  8. 
galegifolia,  and  the  wings  and  keel  also  similarly  shaped,  but  the  style  is  only 
very  slightly  bearded  longitudinally  and  has  the  dorsal  tuft  of  hairs  immediately 


402 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^l. 


[Swainsond. 


behind  the  stigma  of  S.  micropkylla,  laxa,  and  Fraseri.  Pod  inflated,  membranous, 
globular  or  ovoid,  4 to  5 lines  long,  on  a stipes  exceeding  the  calyx,  but  perhaps 
not  quite  full  grown  in  specimens  examined. 

Hab.:  Condamine  River  and  Darling  Downs,  Leichhardt ; Burnett  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. 


4.  S.  phacoides  (Phaca-  [Astragulus]  -like),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Prop.  Austr. 
363  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  217.  A perennial,  with  procumbent  or  ascending  stems  of 
1 to  ljft.,  hoary-pubescent  as  well  as  the  leaves,  the  young  shoots  silky.  Leaflets 
9 to  13,  narrow-oblong  or  linear,  obtuse  or  retuse,  4 lines  to  lin.  long.  Stipules 
lanceolate  or  subulate-pointed.  Flowers  rather  large,  yellow  according 
to  Mitchell  but  purple  in  most  specimens,  in  short  racemes  on  long 
peduncles.  Bracts  small.  Pedicels  very  short.  Calyx  silky-villous,  about  3 

lines  long,  the  lobes  lanceolate,  at  least  as  long  as  the  tube.  Standard  about  6 
lines  diameter,  with  thick  almost  confluent  callosities  almost  on  the  claw  ; wing 
short,  rather  broad  ; keel  incurved,  obtuse.  Style  slender  and  much  incurved, 
but  not  involute  at  the  end.  Pod  sessile,  oblong-linear,  about  lin.  long,  turgid, 
but  coriaceous,  silky-pubescent,  the  upper  suture  slightly  indented. 

Hab.:  E.  coast,  R.  Brown;  Mount  Owen  and  Maranoa  River,  Mitchell. 

Var.  parviflora.  Leaflets  fewer,  usually  narrow.  Flowers  smaller. 

Var.  grandiflora.  Pubescence  whiter,  almost  silky  or  mealy.  Leaflets  broadly  oblong. 
Flowers  large. 

The  two  varieties  distinguished  by  Mr.  Bentham  are  given,  as  in  all  probability  they  may  be 
met  with  in  Queensland. 

The  callosities  at  the  top  of  the  claw  in  this  and  some  of  the  following  species  are  variable  in 
shape  and  consistence,  but  are  always  very  different  from  the  distinct  plates  of  S.  galegifolia,  and 
never  disappear  entirely  as  in  S.  phacifolia  and  others. — Benth. 


5.  S.  oligophylla  (leaves  few),  F.v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  219. 
Apparently  perennial,  with  diffuse  or  ascending  stems  under  1ft.  long,  slightly 
hoary.  Leaflets  5 to  9,  from  obovate  to  cuneate-oblong,  very  obtuse,  \ to  Jin. 
long.  Stipules  small.  Flowers  small,  in  short  racemes,  on  peduncles  sometimes 
scarcely  exceeding  the  leaves,  sometimes  twice  as  long.  Calyx-tube  very  short, 
with  a prominent  minutely-hispid  nerve  descending  from  each  lobe,  the  lobes 
narrow,  almost  subulate,  3 or  4 times  as  long  as  the  tube.  Standard  about  4 
lines  diameter,  with  a transverse  callosity  or  thickening  of  the  top  of  the  claw ; 
wings  shorter  ; keel  much  incurved,  obtuse,  slightly  exceeding  the  wings.  Style 
slender,  much  incurved.  Pod  sessile,  broadly  oblong,  turgid,  about  Jin.  long, 
hoary-pubescent,  the  upper  suture  slightly  indented,  but  not  seen  in  perfect 
condition. 

Hab.:  Inland  localities. 

6.  S.  campylantha  (curved  flowers),  F.  v.  M.  in  Rep.  Grey.  PI.  6 ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  219.  Glabrous  and  somewhat  glaucous,  with  rather  rigid 
stems  of  about  1ft.  Leaflets  usually  about  5,  lanceolate  or  linear,  acute, 
1 to  ljin.  long,  or  those  of  the  lower  leaves  short  and  obtuse.  Stipules  small. 
Flowers  (purple  ?)  not  numerous,  in  pedunculate  racemes  longer  than  the  leaves. 
Bracts  small.  Pedicels  rather  short.  Bracteoles  subulate,  close  to  the  calyx. 
Calyx  2 to  2J  lines  long,  nearly  glabrous  outside ; lobes  acute,  nearly  as  long  as 
the  tube,  pubescent  inside.  Standard  about  5 lines  diameter,  with  a callosity  or 
thickening  of  the  top  of  the  claw  ; wings  twisted,  nearly  as  long  as  the  standard 
and  always  exceeding  the  keel ; keel  with  a short  obtuse  oblique  beak.  Style 
thick,  much  inflected  at  the  base,  hooked  and  almost  involute  at  the  end.  Young 
pod  sessile,  glabrous. 

Hab.:  Bowen  River,  Boicmun,  and  other  inland  localities  (Warrego,  Maranoa,  etc.) 


Swainsona .] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


403 


7.  S.  procumbens  (procumbent),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  46  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  220.  Glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  and  foliage  slightly  silky,  or  sometimes 
pubescent  or  hirsute,  with  procumbent  ascending  or  erect  stems  of  1 to  3ft. 
Leaflets  11  to  21  or  more,  varying  from  oblong  or  almost  linear  and  J to  ^in. 
long  to  lanceolate  or  linear-acute  and  above  lin.  long.  Stipules  herbaceous, 
rather  large.  Flowers  large,  fragrant,  violet  or  blue,  in  a loose  raceme  on  a 
peduncle  often  attaining  1ft.  Bracts  often  as  long  as  the  pedicels  ; bracteoles 
lanceolate,  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube.  Calyx  about  3 lines  long,  the  lobes  at 
least  as  long  as  the  tube,  ciliate  inside.  Standard  in  the  ordinary  form  above 
lin.  broad,  deeply  emarginate,  without  callosities,  the  claw  very  short ; wings 
shorter,  narrow,  slightly  twisted  ; keel  much  incurved,  produced  into  a long 
obtuse  spirally  twisted  beak.  Style  very  long  and  slender,  spirally  twisted  with 
the  keel,  the  slender  tip  sometimes  hooked  but  not  involute.  Pod  sessile,  above 
lin.  long,  acute,  turgid,  very  coriaceous,  often  incurved,  the  seminal  suture  either 
depressed  or  slightly  prominent. — Cyclogyne  swainsonioides,  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop. 
Austr.  397  ; C.  procumbens,  F.  v.  M.  in  Linnaea,  xxv.  393  ; S.  violacea,  Henders. 
Illustr.  Bouq.  t.  19. 

Hab.:  Plains  of  the  Condamine,  Leichhardt;  near  Ipswich,  Nernst ; and  many  other  southern 
localities. 

Var.  (?)  minor.  Leaflets  shorter,  broader,  and  more  frequently  hirsute.  Flowers  smaller,  the 
keel  less  twisted.  Pod  shorter  and  more  turgid. — Wimmera,  Dallachy.  This  Baron  Mueller 
has  named  as  a species  (S.  oncinotropis,  F.  v.  M.,  Melb.  Chem.  and  Drugg.,  Oct.  1884),  and 
as  he  says  that  it  is  usually  found  associated  with  S.  procumbens  in  its  many  southern 
habitats,  it  probably  may  be  also  found  with  it  in  Queensland,  and  the  Baron’s  description  will 
assist  in  its  identification. 

8.  S.  oncinotropis  (referring  to  curved  keel),  F.  v.  M.  Melb.  Chem.  and  Drugg., 
Oct.  1884.  Procumbent,  ascendent,  pubescent.  Leaflets  rather  small,  11  to  25, 
cuneate,  obovate,  or  oftener  ovate-lanceolate,  occasionally  some  ovate-obcordate, 
mostly  short-pointed.  Stipules  rather  large,  herbaceous,  almost  dimidiate- 
cordate,  but  pointed.  Racemes  short.  Flowers  rather  small.  Pedicels  downy, 
hardly  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Bracts  nearly  as  long,  membranous,  broadish. 
Calyx  outside  scantily  grey-bairy ; lobes  long  as  the  tube,  much  narrowed 
upwards.  Petals  all  dark-violet.  Standard  without  any  callosities ; wings 
shorter  than  the  other  petals  ; keel  almost  cyclically  curved,  nearly  flat,  obtuse. 
Style  rather  long,  almost  capillary,  much  curved,  bearded  only  on  the  inner  side 
towards  the  summit.  Pod  sessile,  somewhat  downy,  cymbous-ellipsoid,  pointed. 
Seeds  pale-brown,  not  shining. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities  ? 

9.  S.  phacifolia  (Phaca-leaved),  F.v.M.  in  S.  Austral.  Reg.  1850;  Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  221.  A perennial,  with  ascending  or  erect  stems,  often  exceeding 
lft.,  and  sometimes  much  branched,  usually  hoary  or  white  with  short  hairs, 
giving  it  sometimes  a silky  or  almost  mealy  appearance.  Leaflets  usually  7 to 
11,  linear  or  narrow-oblong,  acute,  rather  obtuse  or  emarginate.  Stipules  broad, 
especially  the  upper  ones,  which  are  often  toothed.  Flowers  few  in  the  raceme, 
on  long  peduncles.  Calyx  hoary  or  rarely  with  black  hairs,  nearly  3 lines  long, 
the  lobes  acute  or  subulate-acuminate,  usually  about  as  long  as  the  tube. 
Standard  thin  at  the  base,  with  a broad  short  claw  and  without  any  callosities  ; 
keel  much  incurved,  but  obtuse  ; wings  as  long  as  the  keel.  Ovary  sessile,  villous; 
style  very  rigid,  flattened  in  the  lower  portion,  distinctly  hooked,  inflexed,  or 
almost  involute  at  the  end.  Pod  narrow-oblong,  J to  nearly  1 in.  long,  often 
incurved,  the  upper  suture  slightly  indented. — S.  stipularis,  F.  v.  M.  in  Linntea, 
xxv.  393. 

Hab.:  Southern  inland  localities. 

This  species  sometimes  resembles  some  specimens  of  S.  phacoides,  but  has  no  callosities  what- 
ever on  the  vexillum ; it  is  more  nearly  allied  to  S.  lesser tiifolia  (S.  colonies),  but  the  indumentum, 
the  large  stipules,  and  larger  flowers,  give  it  a very  different  aspect.  The  keel  is  also  much  more 
curved,  and  the  broad  rigid  style  is  peculiar. — Benth. 


404 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Swai/nsona. 


10.  S.  oroboides  (Orobus-like),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
222.  A small  perennial,  sometimes  appearing  annual,  seldom  exceeding 
Gin.,  the  young  parts  silky-pubescent,  at  length  nearly  glabrous.  Leaflets 
usually  3 or  5,  lanceolate,  acute,  the  terminal  one  often  above  lin.  long, 
the  lateral  ones  smaller,  in  the  lower  leaves  often  solitary,  shorter,  and  more 
obtuse,  in  the  upper  leaves  sometimes  7,  smaller  and  linear.  Stipules  subulate. 
Flowers  small,  usually  few  in  a very  short  raceme,  or  almost  umbellate  on  a rigid 
peduncle,  shortly  exceeding  the  leaves.  Calyx  silky-pubescent,  about  2 lines 
long,  the  lobes  rather  longer  than  the  tube,  but  not  so  fine  as  in  S.  oligophylla. 
Standard  4 to  5 lines  diameter,  with  a very  slight  callosity  at  the  top  of  the  claw, 
sometimes  scarcely  perceptible  ; wings  short ; keel  exceeding  the  wings,  broad, 
incurved,  obtuse.  Ovary  villous ; style  slender,  incurved.  Pod  sessile,  ovoid, 
ovoid-globular,  or  shortly  oblong,  often  incurved,  membranous,  inflated,  pubescent, 
about  £in. long. 

Hab.:  Near  Warwick,  Beckler,  and  other  inland  localities. 

Allied  somewhat  to  S.  oligophylla,  but  readily  distinguished  from  it  by  the  foliage. — Bentli. 

11.  S.  monticola  (a  mountain  plant),  A.  Cunn.;  A.  Gray,  Bot.  Amer.  Expl. 
Exped.  i.  411  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  228.  A diffuse  ascending  or  erect  perennial, 
Leaflets  small,  usually  narrow,  and  acute.  Racemes  usually  loose  and  elongated. 
Calyx  with  scarcely  any  black  hairs.  Keel  broad,  much  incurved,  rather  acute 
or  almost  rostrate.  Pod  sessile  and  inflated,  mostly  under  £in.  in  length. 

Hab.:  Southern  inland  localities. 

12.  S.  luteola  (pale-yellow),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  75;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
228.  A small  species,  hoary  or  silky-pubescent,  with  branching,  erect 
or  ascending  stems  of  4 to  8in.  Leaflets  7 to  13,  obovate  or  oblong, 
obtuse,  not  above  4in.  long.  Stipules  broadly  lanceolate.  Flowers  small, 
yellowish,  few,  in  almost  sessile  racemes  or  interrupted  spikes  shorter  than  the 
leaves.  Bracts  small ; bracteoles  inconspicuous.  Calyx  pubescent,  narrower 
than  in  the  other  species,  not  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  acute,  about  as  long  as  the 
tube.  Standard  nearly  3 lines  diameter,  rather  longer  than  broad,  without 
callosities ; wings  shorter ; keel  nearly  straight,  obtuse.  Style  short,  inflexed, 
almost  involute  at  the  extremity.  Pod  sessile,  oblong,  acuminate,  f to  l£in.  long, 
membranous  and  inflated,  but  narrow,  with  the  seminal  suture  more  or  less 
indented. 

Hab.:  Basaltic  plains,  Peak  Downs,  and  Rockhampton,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

The  small  narrow  flowers  and  close  short  inflorescence  give  to  this  plant  a very  different  aspect 
from  that  of  the  rest  of  the  genus. — Benth. 

13.  S.  parviflora  (flowers  small),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  223.  Nearly  glabrous, 
with  erect  slender  stems  of  about  1ft.  and  a few  leaves.  Leaflets  5 to  9,  linear- 
acute,  mostly  lin.  long  or  more.  Racemes  slender,  with  small  distant  flowers. 
Bracts  minute.  Pedicels  about  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Calyx-tube  about  1 line 
long,  the  teeth  shorter,  narrow,  acute.  Standard  without  callosities,  about  3 
lines  broad  and  not  so  long ; wings  as  long  as  the  keel,  which  is  much  curved, 
but  obtuse.  Style  much  inflexed,  but  not  involute  at  the  end,  with  a small  tuft 
of  hairs  round  the  stigma.  Pod  sessile,  ovoid,  membranous,  much  inflated,  about 
£in.  long. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill. 

14.  S.  microphylla  (small- leaved),  A.  Gray,  Bot.  Amer.  Expl.  Exped.  i. 
410  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  223.  Much  branched  at  the  base,  with  ascending  or 
erect  branches  of  \ to  1ft.,  or  rarely  more,  glabrous  or  minutely  pubescent. 
Leaflets  numerous,  obovate,  obcordate  or  cuneate-oblong,  usually  emarginate, 
sometimes  all  under  1 line,  more  frequently  2 to  3 and  rarely  4 lines  long. 


Swainsona.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


405 


Flowers  (purple  ?)  small,  rather  numerous,  in  erect  racemes  much  longer  than 
the  leaves.  Pedicels  very  short.  Bracteoles  minute.  Calyx  shortly  pubescent, 
with  a few  small  black  hairs,  scarcely  above  1 line  long,  the  teeth  very  short. 
Standard  about  8 lines  diameter,  without  callosities,  the  claw  very  short ; keel 
obtuse.  Style  much  curved,  but  not  involute  at  the  end,  with  a small  tuft  of 
hairs  at  the  top  behind  the  stigma,  besides  the  longitudinal  beard  of  the  genus. 
Pod  sessile,  ovoid  or  nearly  globular,  3 to  5 lines  long,  much  inflated,  more  or 
less  incurved,  the  base  of  the  style  much  so,  the  seminal  suture  slightly  intruded. 

Rab.:  Rockhampton,  Dallachy ; Connor’s  River,  Bowman  ; and  inland  localities. 

15.  S.  Fraseri  (after  C.  Fraser),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  224.  A tall  species, 
often  attaining  5 or  6ft.  Leaflets  11  to  21  or  more,  distinctly  petiolulate,  ovate 
or  oblong,  very  obtuse,  mostly  f to  fin.  long,  green  on  both  sides.  Flowers 
violet-purple  or  nearly  white,  rather  small,  numerous,  in  long  loose  racemes. 
Calyx  glabrous  or  slightly  hairy,  nearly  2 lines  long,  the  teeth  rather  longer  than 
in  S.  laxa,  but  not  exceeding  the  tube.  Standard  about  5 to  6 lines  diameter, 
without  callosities  ; wings  shorter  than  the  very  obtuse  keel.  Style  incurved, 
with  a very  conspicuous  tuft  of  hairs  on  the  top  behind  the  stigma,  and  a few 
short  hairs  on  the  inner  side.  Pod  inflated,  membranous,  acute,  above  1 in.  long, 
on  a stipes  much  longer  than  the  calyx. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Brisbane  River. 

16.  S.  laxa  (loose  growth),  B.  Br.  in  App.  Sturt  Exped.  18  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  224.  Apparently  a rather  tall  species,  with  terete  branches,  glabrous  or 
the  young  shoots  slightly  silky.  Leaflets  11  to  21,  distinctly  petiolulate,  from 
broadly  ovate  to  oblong,  very  obtuse,  rarely  above  fin.  long,  and  often  very  small. 
Stipules  broad  and  falcate.  Flowers  yellow,  rather  small,  in  long  loose  racemes 
flowering  from  near  the  base.  Bracts  very  small.  Pedicels  short,  with  minute 
bracteoles  below  the  calyx.  Calyx  glabrous  or  slightly  hairy,  If  line  long,  the 
teeth  acute,  shorter  than  the  tube.  Standard  about  5 lines  diameter,  without 
callosities  ; wings  much  shorter  ; keel  nearly  as  long  as  the  standard,  very  obtuse. 
Style  not  involute,  bearing  a prominent  tuft  of  hairs  round  or  behind  the  stigma, 
especially  at  the  back,  besides  the  longitudinal  beard  of  the  genus.  Pod  glabrous, 
inflated,  acute,  fully  fin.  long,  on  a stipes  usually  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  by  F.  v.  Mueller. 


38.  GLYCYRRHIZA,  Linn. 

(Sweet  root.) 

(Clidanthera,  R.  Br.) 

Calyx-lobes  equal  or  the  2 upper  ones  shorter  and  more  united.  Petals  narrow  ; 
standard  ovate  or  oblong,  nearly  sessile  ; keel  shorter,  obtuse  or  almost  acute, 
the  petals  scarcely  cohering.  Upper  stamen  free  or  slightly  cohering  with  the 
others  in  an  open  sheath ; anther-cells  confluent  at  the  top,  the  alternate  smaller 
anthers  opening  deeply  in  2 unequal  valves.  Ovary  sessile,  with  2 or  more 
ovules  ; style  incui-ved,  glabrous,  with  a terminal  stigma.  Pod  ovate,  oblong  or 
shortly  linear,  flattened  or  turgid,  glandular,  muricate  or  rarely  smooth,  inde- 
hiscent  or  opening  tardily  in  2 valves.  Seeds  not  strophiolate. — Herbs,  with  the 
root  often  sweet.  Leaves  unequally  pinnate  or  rarely  3-foliolate,  without 
stipellae.  Stipules  narrow,  membranous,  deciduous.  Flowers  blue-violet,  white 
or  yellowish,  sessile  or  very  shortly  pedicellate,  in  axillary  racemes.  Bracts 
narrow,  very  deciduous.  Bracteoles  none. 

The  majority  of  the  species  are  from  the  E.  Mediterranean  region,  and  temperate  and  sub- 
tropical Asia  ; and  one  is  found  in  extratropical  S.  America.  The  Australian  species  is  endemic, 
although  nearly  allied  to  some  of  the  Mediterranean  ones.  The  exceptional  anthers  first 


406 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


\Glycyrrhiza. 


observed  by  R.  Brown,  upon  which  he  founded  his  genus  Clidanthera  as  distinguished  from 
Psoralen,  are  to  be  seen,  in  a greater  or  less  degree,  in  all  the  species  of  Glycyrrhiza,  which 
moreover  differ  essentially  from  Psoralea  in  habit,  in  the  ovules  always  more  than  one,  and  in 
the  seed,  even  when  solitary,  never  adhering  to  the  pericarp. — Benth. 

1.  G-.  psoraleoides  (Psoralea-like),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  225.  An  erect  herb 
or  undershrub  of  2ft.  or  more,  glabrous  or  nearly  so,  but  more  or  less  glandular- 
viscid.  Leaflets  usually  9 or  11,  from  elliptical-oblong  to  linear,  f to  lin.  long  or 
rarely  more,  bordered  with  minute  glandular  teeth.  Flowers  small,  in  pedun- 
culate racemes  or  interrupted  spikes.  Calyx  about  1£  line  long;  petals  about 
twice  as  long.  Ovules  2.  Pod  reddish,  about  3 lines  long,  flattened,  burr-like, 
muricate,  the  sutures  slightly  thickened,  apparently  indehiscent,  containing  1 or  2 
brown,  slightly-veined  seeds. — Indiyofera  acanthocarpa,  Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Three 
Exped.  ii.  17  ; Clidanthera  psoraleoides,  R.  Br.  App.  Sturt  Exped.  11  ; Psoralea 
acanthocarpa,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  45,  and  PI.  Yict.  ii.  t.  26. 

Hab.:  St.  George,  Jos.  Wedd. 

39.  ORMOCARPUM,  Beauv. 

(From  the  necklace-like  pod.) 

Calyx,  2 upper  lobes  connivent  or  shortly  connate,  the  lowest  rather  longer. 
Standard  orbicular  ; keel  broad,  incurved,  as  long  as  the  wings.  Stamens  all 
united  in  a sheath  opened  on  the  upper  side,  and  often  splitting  also  on  the  lower 
side  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; style  indexed,  filiform. 
Pod  linear,  flattened,  dividing  into  2 or  more  oblong  or  elongated  indehiscent 
articles,  narrowed  at  each  end  and  longitudinally  furrowed,  often  only  one  coming 
to  perfection.— Tall  shrubs.  Leaves  pinnate  with  small  leaflets,  or  in  a species 
not  Australian  of  1 large  leaflet.  Stipules  striate.  Flowers  yellow,  white,  or 
streaked  with  purple,  solitary  or  few  together  in  axillary  racemes.  Bracts  and 
bracteoles  persistent. 

Besides  the  Australian  species,  which  has  a wide  range  in  tropical  Asia,  there  are  2 or  3 from 
tropical  Africa,  and  2 or  3 less  perfectly  known  from  Mexico. — Benth. 

1.  O.  sennoides  (Senna-like),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  315,  var.  lavis : Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  226.  Perfectly  glabrous,  without  the  glandular  pubescence  of  the 
common  E.  Indian  form.  Leaflets  9 to  15,  broadly  oblong,  very  obtuse,  £ to  fin. 
long.  Stipules  lanceolate-acuminate,  sometimes  very  small,  sometimes  broad  and 
2 lines  long.  Peduncles  axillary,  either  short  and  1 -flowered,  or  rather  longer, 
bearing  2 or  3 flowers.  Pedicels  2 to  3 lines  long,  with  2 small  bracteoles  above 
the  middle.  Flowers  yellow,  about  5 lines  long.  Pod  usually  of  3 or  4 articles, 
but  some  remaining  small  and  imperfect,  and  1 or  2 only  ripening,  attaining  in 
this  variety  above  lin.  in  length,  and  about  3 lines  broad  in  the  middle. — 
FEschynomene  colutcoides,  A.  Rich.  Sert.  Astrol.  87,  t.  32. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River  (?),  Banks  and  Solander,  R.  Brown. 

I have  seen  Australian  specimens  only  in  Herb.  R.  Brown,  and  a coloured  figure  in  Sir  J. 
Banks’  unpublished  plates,  neither  with  the  precise  station.  This  glabrous  variety  extends  over 
the  Archipelago  to  Siam  and  the  Philippines.  The  common  E.  Indian  form  (Wight,  Ic.  t.  297) 
has  usually  a glandular-pubescent  inflorescence,  and  the  pods  with  shorter  articles  more  or  less 
glandular- warted  ; but  there  appear  to  be  intermediates  preventing  the  maintaining  the  two 
forms  as  independent  species. — Benth. 


40.  /ESCHYNOMENE,  Lirm. 

(Modest ; from  some  species  being  sensitive.) 

Calyx-lobes  nearly  equal  or  united  into  2 lips,  either  entire  or  the  upper  one 
2-lobed,  the  lower  3-lobed.  Standard  orbicular ; keel  much  curved  and  almost 
beaked,  or  rarely  obovate  and  nearly  straight.  Stamens  usually  all  united  in  a 
sheath  more  or  less  split  both  on  the  upper  and  lower  edge,  dividing  the  stamens 


JEschynomene.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


407 


into  two  bundles  of  5 each  ; anthers  reniforra.  Ovary  stipitate,  with  2 or  more 
ovules;  style  filiform  or  subulate.  Pod  stipitate,  separating  into  2 or  more  short, 
flat,  usually  indehiscent  reticulate  articles.— Herbs,  undershrubs,  or  in  non- 
Australian  species  shrubs.  Leaves  unequally  pinnate,  with  small  leaflets,  without 
stipell®.  Stipules  free,  flowers  yellow,  often  streaked  with  red,  in  axillary  or 
rarely  terminal  racemes. 

A considerable  tropical  genus,  the  species  numerous  in  America,  fewer  in  Africa,  and  only  two 
in  Asia.  Of  the  three  Australian  ones,  one  is  common  in  Asia  and  Africa,  one  in  South  America 
and  South  Africa,  and  the  other  in  America. — Benth.  (in  part). 

Leaflets  numerous.  Stipules  produced  below  their  insertion.  Calyx  deeply 


2-lipped 1.  JE.  indica. 

Calyx  2-lipped.  Leaflets  10  to  20  pairs 2.  JE.  americana. 

Leaflets  7 to  11.  Stipules  striate,  persistent,  not  produced  below  their 
insertion.  Calyx-lobes  nearly  equal 3.  JE.falcata. 


1.  JE.  indica  (Indian),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  320  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  226. 
A diffuse  or  erect  annual  of  1 to  2ft.,  or  when  luxuriant  in  very  wet  places  3ft. 
high,  usually  glabrous,  but  the  stem  occasionally  bearing  a few  asperities. 
Leaflets  usually  40  to  60,  linear-oblong,  obtuse,  2 to  3 or  rarely  4 lines  long. 
Stipules  lanceolate,  acute,  produced  below  their  insertion  into  a rounded 
appendage.  Racemes  shorter  than  the  leaves,  loosely  2 to  4-flowered,  and  often 
bearing  a pinnate  leaf  below  the  flowers.  Pedicels  slender.  Bracts  like  the 
stipules  but  often  denticulate  ; bracteoles  short,  persistent.  Calyx  about  2 lines 
long,  deeply  divided  into  2 lips,  the  upper  one  2-toothed,  the  lower  shortly 
3-lobed.  Petals  about  4 lines  long,  glabrous ; keel  much  curved,  almost  acute. 
Pod  on  a long  stipes,  the  upper  suture  straight,  the  lower  slightly  indented 
between  the  seeds  ; articles  about  2 lines  long,  glabrous,  smooth  or  more  or  less 
warted  or  muricate  in  the  centre. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  219  ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  405  ; 
yE.  cachemiriana,  Camb.  in  Jacquem.  Voy.  40,  t.  48. 

Hab  : Burdekin  Kiver,  Bowman,  and  many  other  parts  in  tropical  Queensland. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  tropical  Asia  and  Africa. 

2.  JE.  americana  (American),  Linn.  Stems  virgate,  about  3ft.,  pilose, 
herbaceous  or  suffrutescent.  Leaflets  of  from  10  to  20  pairs,  oblong-linear, 
oblique  at  the  base,  mucronate,  3 to  4-nerved.  Stipules  calcarate.  Racemes  few- 
flowered.  Flowers  3 lines  long,  yellow  or  purplish.  Calyx  bilabiate.  Pod 
shortly  stipitate,  incurved,  articles  2 to  8,  half-round,  rectilinear  on  the  upper, 
roundish  on  the  lower  margin,  glabrescent,  li  line  diameter. — Griseb.  FI.  Brit. 
West  Ind.  Isl.  185. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  — Persieli  (F.  v.  M.) 

3.  JE.  falcata  (boomerang-shaped),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  322 ; var.  paueijuga,  Benth. 
in  Mart.  FI.  Bras.  Papil.  67,  t.  14,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  227.  Stems  from  a woody 
stock  diffuse,  decumbent  or  ascending,  often  under  1ft.  and  rarely  nearly  2ft. 
long,  more  or  less  pubescent.  Leaflets  7 to  11,  obovate-oblong  or  cuneate, 
truncate  or  emarginate,  usually  oblique  at  the  base,  and  about  3 to  4 lines  long. 
Stipules  acute,  striate,  not  produced  below  their  insertion.  Peduncles  slender,  as 
long  as  or  longer  than  the  leaves,  mostly  2 or  3-flowered.  Pedicels  much  longer 
than  the  calyx.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  small,  striate.  Calyx  1J  line  long,  the 
lobes  all  equally  divided,  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  rather  broader. 
Standard  3 to  4 lines  diameter  ; wings  broad ; keel  much  curved,  almost  rostrate. 
Pod  on  a slender  stipes  of  2 to  4 lines,  sprinkled  with  short  hairs,  the  upper 
suture  nearly  straight  and  continuous,  the  lower  edge  deeply  indented  between 
the  seeds  ; articles  4 to  6,  1^-  to  2 lines  diameter,  opening  in  2 valves  on  the  lower 
edge  and  scarcely  separating  from  each  other. — zE.  micrantha,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  321  ; 
Harv.  and  Sond.  FI.  Cap.  ii.  226,  with  all  the  synonyms  there  adduced. 


Part  II.  G 


408  XLIII.  LEGU  MINOS/E.  [JEschynomene. 

Hub.:  Broaclsound,  R.  Brown  ; on  the  Burdekin,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Wide  Bay,  Bidwill;  plains  of 
Rockhampton,  Bowman,  Dallachy  ; Moreton  Bay,  Bidwill,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

The  species  is  common  in  Brazil,  where  it  diverges  into  a number  of  varieties  mentioned  in 
Martin’s  above-quoted  Flora.  The  Australian  form  appears  to  me  quite  identical  with  the 
variety  there  named  paueijuga,  which  is  the  most  common  in  S.  Brazil  and  Montevideo,  and 
which  is  also  the  one  found  in  S.E.  Africa  and  Madagascar. — Bentli. 


41.  SMITHIA,  Ait. 

(After  Sir  J.  E.  Smith.) 

Calyx  deeply  divided  into  2 lips,  the  upper  one  entire  or  notched,  the  lower 
entire  8-toothed  or  3-lobed.  Standard  nearly  orbicular,  narrowed  into  a short 
claw,  wings  and  keel  nearly  as  long  as  the  standard.  Stamens  united  in  a 
sheath  open  on  the  upper  side  and  soon  splitting  also  on  the  lower  side  ; anthers 
reniform.  Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate,  with  several  ovules ; style  filiform,  with  a 
small  terminal  stigma.  Pod  consisting  of  2 or  more  flattened  articles,  separated 
by  very  narrow  contractions  and  folded  over  each  other  within  the  calyx. — 
Diffuse  herbs  or  in  some  African  species  shrubs.  Leaves  pinnate,  without 
stipellae.  Stipules  membranous  or  scarious.  Flowers  yellow,  in  axillary 
racemes  or  clusters.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  scarious  or  striate,  persistent. 

'The  genus  has  a considerable  number  of  tropical  Asiatic  and  E.  African  species.  The  only 
Australian  one  is  one  of  the  commonest  in  E.  India. — Bentli. 

1.  S.  conferta  (crowded),  Sm.  in  Bees'  Cyclop,  xxxiii.  ; Bentli.  FI.  Anstr.  ii. 
228.  A procumbent  or  diffuse  perennial  of  1 to  1-J-ft.  or  rarely  more,  glabrous 
except  a few  long  rigid  hairs  or  bristles  on  the  young  branches,  petioles,  margins 
and  midribs  of  the  leaflets,  and  on  the  calyx.  Leaflets  7 to  15  or  more,  rather 
crowded  on  a short  common  petiole,  oblong  or  linear,  oblique,  under  |in.  long. 
Stipules  produced  below  their  insertion  into  a subulate-acuminate  appendage 
longer  than  the  upper  part.  Racemes  reduced  to  clusters  of  8 to  5 flowers, 
almost  sessile  in  the  upper  axils.  Bracteoles  broad,  striate,  above  half  the  length 
of  the  calyx.  Calyx  3^  to  4 lines  long,  the  lips  slightly  falcate,  acute,  mucronate, 
finely  striated.  Ovules  about  6.  Pod  not  protruding  from  the  calyx. — 8.  capitata, 
Desv.  Journ.  Bot.  i.  (iii.)  121 ; S.  sensitiva,  var.  B.  W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  220. 

Hab.:  Common  in  tropical  Queensland  ; common  also  in  E.  India  and  in  the  Archipelago. 


42.  *ARACHIS,  Linn. 

(Ancient  name.) 

Calyx  tube  filiform,  the  lobes  membranous,  the  4 upper  ones  connate,  the 
lowest  thin,  distinct.  Petals  and  stamens  inserted  into  the  apex  of  the  tube. 
Standard  suborbicular.  Wings  oblong,  free,  keel  incurved,  rostrate.  Stamens 
all  connate  in  a closed  tube,  sometimes  only  9 ; anthers  alternately  longer  and 
shorter,  fixed  near  the  base  and  versatile.  Ovary  subsessile  at  the  base  of  the 
tube,  2 or  3-ovulate,  the  torus  after  the  flower  falls  becoming  an  elongated,  deflexed, 
rigid  stalk,  forcing  the  fruit  into  the  ground,  the  apex  acute,  and  after  the  style 
falls  terminated  by  a stigma-like  callus  ; style  long,  filiform  ; stigma  minute, 
terminal.  Pod  ripening  beneath  the  soil,  oblong,  reticulate,  indehiscent,  sub- 
torulose,  but  not  articulated,  continuous  within.  Seeds  1 to  3,  irregularly  ovoid. — 
Low,  often  prostrate  herbs. 

A small  genus,  this  species  African  (?),  the  other  species  confined  to  Brazil. 

1.  A.  hypogaea  (below  the  earth),  Linn.  Earth  nut,  pea  nut  or  ground 
nut.  Stems  1 to  2ft.,  long,  herbaceous,  diffuse,  the  branches  clothed  especially 
above  with  spreading  hairs.  Stipules  lin,  deep,  the  lower  half  adnate,  the  points 


Arachis.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


409 


lanceolate.  Petioles  1 to  l^in.  long,  silky.  Leaflets  in  2 pairs  without  a 
terminal  one,  obovate,  1 to  l^in.  long  by  more  than  half  as  broad.  Flowers 
axillary,  solitary,  on  long  slender  peduncles,  only  the  lower  ones  fertile.  Pod  lin. 
long,  l^in.  broad. 

Hab.:  Africa,  or  probably  with  the  rest  of  the  genus  Brazilian.  Now  found  in  Queensland,  as 
in  many  other  parts,  as  a stray  from  cultivation. 

This  plant  is  extensively  grown  in  many  warm  countries  as  an  article  of  food,  and  for  the  sake 
of  the  oil  contained  in  its  seeds  (which  is  largely  used  by  perfumers  in  the  preparation  of 
pomades  and  cold  cream,  also  for  soap-making,  burning,  <fcc.) 

48.  ZORNIA,  Gmel. 

(After  Sohn  Zorn.) 

Calyx  small  and  thin,  the  2 upper  lobes  united,  the  2 lateral  ones  small,  the 
lowest  narrow.  Standard  orbicular  ; wings  obovate  or  oblong ; keel  incurved, 
almost  rostrate.  Stamens  united  in  a closed  tube  ; anthers  alternately  long  and 
short.  Ovary  sessile  with  several  ovules  ; style  filiform,  with  a small  terminal 
stigma.  Pod  with  the  upper  suture  continuous,  the  lower  one  much  indented  ; 
articles  several,  flat,  smooth  muricate  or  bristly.— Herbs.  Leaves  of  2 or  4 
digitate  leaflets,  without  stipellse.  Stipules  striate.  Flowers  in  terminal  and 
axillary  loose  spikes.  Bracts  in  pairs,  enclosing  the  flowers,  striate  and  oblique 
like  the  stipules,  but  broader  and  larger  ; bracteoles  none. 

The  genus  is  chiefly  American,  one  species  found  also  in  South  Africa,  and  another  widely 
dispersed  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World,  including  Australia. — Bentli. 

1.  Z.  diphylla  (2-leafleted),  Pers.  Syn.  ii.  318;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  228. 
A low  herb,  sometimes  annual,  sometimes  forming  a thick  rootstock  of  several 
years’  duration,  the  branches  decumbent,  ascending  or  nearly  erect,  Gin.  to  1 or 
2ft.  long.  Leaflets  2 at  the  end  of  the  petiole  varying  from  ovate  and  only  2 or  3 
lines  long  in  the  lower  leaves,  to  lanceolate  or  linear  from  ^ to  lin.  long  in  the 
upper  ones,  rarely  all  ovate  acute  and  rather  larger,  or  all  linear.  Flowers  in  the 
Australian  varieties  3 to  4 lines  long,  almost  enclosed  in  the  narrow  or  ovate 
bracts,  which  like  the  stipules  are  produced  into  a short  auricle  below  their 
insertion,  and  are  often,  as  well  as  the  leaves,  marked  with  a few  pellucid  dots. 
Pod  longer  or  shorter  than  the  bracts,  of  3 to  6 articles,  quite  smooth  and 
reticulate  or  pubescent  or  muricate  with  hooked  or  pubescent  bristles  or  prickles. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  Burnett,  Dawson,  and  Brisbane  Rivers, 
F.  v.  Mueller;  from  Broadsound  to  Northumberland  Islands,  R.  Brown;  Port  Curtis, 
M'Gillivray ; Rockhampton,  Thozet  and  others  ; Dogwood  Creek,  Leichhardt. 

The  species  is  common  in  most  hot  countries  in  both  the  New  and  the  Old  World.  Of  the 
numerous  varieties  enumerated  in  Mart.  FI.  Bras.  Papil.  79,  the  following  at  least  occur  in 
Australia : — 

a.  vulgaris,  Benth.  The  common  Asiatic  form,  with  the  leaflets  of  the  lower  leaves  small 
and  ovate,  those  of  the  upper  ones  lanceolate  or  linear,  the  bracts  rather  narrow  and  flowers 
small. 

b.  zeylonensis,  Benth.  Stems  elongated  and  loose.  Leaflets  rather  larger,  all  ovate  or  ovate- 
lanceolate.  Bracts  rather  broad.  Flowers  rather  larger. 

c.  gracilis,  Benth.  Stems  more  erect,  glabrous  or  hairy  as  well  as  the  leaves.  Leaflets  mostly 
lanceolate  or  linear  or  even  all  linear.  Bracts  rather  narrow.  Flowers  small. 

In  all  the  varieties  the  pod  may  be  found  smooth  or  muricate,  glabrous  or  pubescent,  and  in 
one  of  the  forms  of  the  var.  gracilis,  from  Sturt’s  Creek,  F.  v.  Mueller  (Z.  chtetophora,  F.  v.  M.  in 
Trans.  Phil.  Inst.  Viet.  iii.  56) ; the  pods  are  rather  larger  and  covered  with  rigid  setce  much 
longer  than  in  any  other  Zornia  I have  seen. — Bentli. 

Var.  filifolia,  Bail.  An  erect  or  procumbent  annual  plant,  the  stems  and  branches  very  slender 
and  densely  studded  with  prominent  brown  oval  glands.  Leaflets  about  lin.  long,  J line  broad, 
with  the  glands  of  the  stem.  Bracts  and  flowers  smaller  than  in  other  forms,  but  very  glandular. 
— Walsh  River,  T.  Barclay -Millar. 

In  the  same  packet  of  specimens  were  two  other  forms  of  this  widespread  variable  plant,  the 
one  being  referable  to  the  var.  gracilis,  Benth.,  the  other  only  differing  from  the  normal  in  that 
the  whole  plant,  like  var.  Jilifolia,  was  thickly  studded  with  dark-coloured  glands. 


410 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


44.  DESMODIUM,  Desv. 

(From  desmos,  a chain  ; pods  jointed.) 

(Dendrolobium,  W.  and  Am.;  Dicerma,  DC.;  Nicolsonia,  DC.) 

Calyx-tube  short,  the  2 upper  lobes  more  or  less  united.  Standard  from 
oblong  to  orbicular,  narrowed  at  the  base  ; wings  oblong,  usually  adhering  in  the 
middle  to  the  keel ; keel  obtuse.  Upper  stamen  free  or  more  or  less  united  with 
the  others  in  a sheath  or  tube  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate  with 
2 or  more  ovules  ; style  incurved,  subulate.  Pod  longer  than  the  calyx,  flat,  one 
or  both  sutures  indented  between  the  seeds,  separating  into  indehiscent  1 -seeded 
articles,  or  rarely  the  articles  opening  on  the  lower  edge  in  2 valves,  and  then 
not  always  readily  separating. — Herbs,  shrubs  or  rarely  small  trees.  Leaves 
pinnately  8-foliolate  or  1-foliolate,  with  stipellte.  Stipules  usually  dry,  striate, 
membranous.  Flowers  purple,  blue,  pink  or  white,  usually  small,  in  terminal 
racemes  or  panicles,  or  rarely  in  axillary  umbels  or  clusters. 

A very  large  genus  widely  dispersed  over  the  tropical  regions  both  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World, 
extending  beyond  the  tropics  into  N.  America,  and  a very  few  species  into  extratropical  S. 
America,  S.  Africa,  and  extropical  Australia.  Of  the  following  Australian  spec'es,  9 belong  also 
to  E.  India  and  in  most  cases  the  Archipelago,  1 is  common  to  Australia  and  New  Caledonia, 
1 in  the  Moluccas,  the  remaining  7 are  endemic  but  partaking  of  the  general  character  of  the 
Asiatic  species,  with  the  exception  of  D.  acanthocladum,  which  is  singular  in  the  genus  for  its 
spinescent  branchlets. — Benth. 

This  genus  is  readily  divisible  into  from  12  to  15  tolerably  well-marked  sections,  many  of 
which  have  been  proposed  by  myself  or  others  as  distinct  genera  ; but  as  they  have  proved  to  be 
distinguished  some  by  habit  only  without  marked  floral  or  carpological  characters,  others  by 
variations  in  the  fruit,  not  always  constant  or  easily  appreciated,  I found  it  more  convenient,  on  a 
general  review  for  the  Floras  of  Brazil  and  Hongkong,  to  retain  them  all  under  one  generic 
name. — Bentli. 


* Wings  usually  free  from  the  keel.  Pod  glabrous  or  silky-liairy. 


Flowers  white,  in  dense  axillary  shortly  pedunculate  umbels.  Pod- 
articles  rather  thick  (Sect.  Dendrolobium) 1.  D.  umbellatum. 

Flowers  small,  in  dense  umbels  or  heads  along  the  branches  of  a leafy 
panicle,  each  umbel  almost  enclosed  in  a 2-foliolate  leaf.  Pod-articles 
2,  nearly  orbicular  (Sect.  Phyllodium) 2.  D.  pulchellum. 

Flowers  in  leafless  racemes.  Pedicels  short  crowded.  Pod-articles  2, 
nearly  orbicular.  Leaflets  digitate  or  nearly  so  (Sect.  Dicerma)  . 3.  D.  biarticulatum. 


**  Wings  adhering  to  slight  lateral  protuberances  or  membranous  appendages  of  the  keel. 


Branchlets  spinescent.  Flowering  branches  reduced  to  axillary  spines 
with  1 or  2 pairs  of  flowers  below  the  summit.  Pod-articles  of 

Heteroloma,  but  usually  1 or  2 only 4.  D.  acanthocladum. 

Shrub  with  1-foliolate  leaves,  winged  petioles,  racemose  flowers,  minute 

bracts  and  acute  keel  (Sect.  Pteroloma) 5.  D.  triquetrum. 

Flowers  in  racemes  or  panicles.  Ovules  several,  rarely  2 only.  Pod  of 


several  articles  (unless  by  abortion)  indehiscent,  the  upper  suture 
straight  or  slightly  indented,  the  lower  suture  much  indented 
between  the  seeds  (Sect.  Heteroloma). 

Bracts  narrow,  persisting  at  least  till  the  flower  expands.  Pedicels 
usually  in  pairs  (Leptostachya). 

Leaves  all  1-foliolate.  Pod-articles  small,  nearly  glabrous  ....  6.  H.  gangeticum. 

Leaves  very  large,  1-foliolate.  Pod-articles  long,  almost  lanceolate  7.  D.  dependens. 
Leaves  all  (except  sometimes  the  lowestl  3-foliolate. 

Pod-articles  flat,  prehensile-pubescent. 

Stems  rather  rigid,  erect  or  ascending.  Fruiting-pedieels  re- 
flexed, not  longer  than  the  calyx 8.  D.  bracliypodum. 

Stems  slender,  diffuse.  Fruiting-pedieels  slender,  spreading, 
much  longer  than  the  calyx.  Plant  slightly  pubescent. 

Ovules  and  pod-articles  several 9.  D.  varians. 

Stems  diffuse  or  procumbent,  rusty-villous.  Leaves  softly- 
villous,  rhomboid-ovate.  Pedicels  slender,  spreading  rather 

longer  than  the  calyx 10.  D.  rhytidophyllum. 

Pod-articles  somewhat  turgid,  slightly  pubescent.  Stem  trailing. 

Leaflets  lanceolate,  2 to  3in.  long 11.  D.  campylocaulon. 


Desmodium.\ 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


411 


Bracts  broad  membranous,  falling  off  long  before  the  flower  expands 
( Strobilifera  ) 

Tall  and  erect.  Leaflets  oblong  or  elliptical,  1J  to  2|in.  long. 

Fruiting-pedicels  mostly  in  pairs,  rigid,  reflexed,  not  longer  than 

the  calyx 12.  D.  nemorosum. 

Diffuse  and  slender.  Pedicels  mostly  solitary,  filiform,  spreading, 
longer  than  the  calyx. 

Pod-articles  thin,  strongly  reticulate.  Leaflets  broadly  obcordate  . 13.  I),  trichostachyum. 
Pod-articles  scarcely  separating,  very  finely  veined,  the  upper 
suture  thickened  (see  below,  sect.  Nicolsonia). 

Flowers  in  terminal  racemes  or  panicles.  Bracts  of  the  Strobilifera. 

Ovules  several.  Pod  very  flat,  the  upper  suture  straight,  the  lower 

slightly  indented,  and  opening  more  or  less  in  2 valves  (Sect. 

Nicolsonia). 

Fruiting-pedicels  short,  erect,  or  nearly  so  in  pairs  or  clusters. 

Racemes  short,  dense,  in  a short  terminal  panicle.  Hairs  short, 

usually  appressed 14.  D.  polycarpum. 

Racemes  elongated.  Hairs  of  the  stem  and  rhachis  long  and 

spreading 15.  D.  trichocaulon. 

Leaflets  usually  one  broader  than  long.  Calyx-teeth  and  pedicels 

short 16.  D.  reniforme. 

Fruiting-pedicels  slender,  spreading,  solitary  and  distant. 

Stem  loosely  diffuse.  Leaves  not  crowded,  leaflets  oblong.  Hairs 

long  and  spreading 17.  D.  Muelleri. 

Stems  procumbent,  pubescent.  Leaves  crowded ; leaflets  small. 

Racemes  filiform,  few-flowered 18.  D.  parviflorum. 

1.  D.  umbellatum  (flowers  in  umbels),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  325 ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  230.  A bushy  shrub,  occasionally  growing  into  a small  tree,  the 
young  shoots  silky.  Leaflets  3,  ovate  or  oval  oblong,  obtuse  or  rarely  almost 
acute,  mostly  1^  to  2in.  long,  glabrous  or  nearly  so  above,  pale  or  silky-pubescent 
underneath,  with  prominent  primary  veins.  Stipules  very  deciduous.  Flowers 
white,  in  dense  axillary  umbels  on  a common  peduncle,  rarely  attaining  |in. 
Bracts  very  deciduous.  Pedicels  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Bracteoles  persistent,  as 
long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Calyx  silky,  about  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  acute,  not 
longer  than  the  tube.  Standard  broad,  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx ; wings  much 
shorter  ; keel  as  long  as  the  standard,  without  lateral  protuberances.  Pod  of  3 or 
4 thickish  almost  fleshy  articles,  each  3 or  4 lines  long  and  not  so  much  in 
breadth,  not  reticulate,  indehiscent. — D.  auxtrale,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  326  ; Dendrolo- 
bium  umbellatum,  W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  224  (under  Desmodiurn ) ; Benth.  in  PL 
Jungh.  16  ; Ormocarpum  oblongum,  Desv.  in  Ann.  Soc.  Linn.  1825,  307. 

Hab.:  Barnard  Isles,  BPGillivray ; Port  Denison  and  Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallacliy  ; also  in  R. 
Brown's  collection  ; Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallachy. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  East  India  and  the  Archipelago. — Benth. 


2.  D.  pulchellum  (pretty),  Benth.  FI.  Hongk.  83,  and  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  231.  A tall  branching  perennial  or  undershrub,  the  branches  pubescent  or 
villous.  Leaflets  3,  ovate,  obtuse,  the  margins  sometimes  slightly  sinuate,  the 
terminal  one  usually  8 to  4in.  long,  the  lateral  ones  smaller,  all  slightly  pubescent 
or  nearly  glabrous  above,  softly  pubescent  underneath.  Flowers  small,  in  dense 
umbels  or  heads,  sessile  along  the  branches  of  a large  terminal  leafy  panicle,  each 
umbel  almost  enclosed  in  a 2-foliolate  leaf-like  bract  at  its  base,  each  leaflet 
broadly  ovate  or  orbicular,  | to  fin.  long  and  very  oblique  at  the  base.  Pod 
usually  of  2 flat  nearly  orbicular  small  articles,  glabrous  or  nearly  so  except  a 
few  hairs  along  the  edge,  both  edges  of  the  pod,  especially  the  lower  one, 
indented  between  the  seeds. — Diccrma  pulchellum,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  339  ; Wight,  Ic. 
t.  418;  Phyllodium  pulchellum , Desv.;  Benth.  in  PI.  Jungh.  217. 

Hab.:  N.  coast,  R.  Brown.  Widely  spread  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  extending 
northwards  to  S.  China. 


XLIIL  LEGUMINOSiE. 


412 


[Desmodium. 


3.  U.  biarticulatum  (articles  of  pod  2),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  121  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  281.  A rigid  undershrub  with  prostrate  decumbent  or  almost 
erect  branches  of  1 to  2 or  rarely  3ft.,  the  young  shoots  softly  pubescent  or  silky. 
Leaflets  3,  oblong  or  on  the  lower  leaves  narrow-obovate,  ^ to  1 or  rarely  l|in. 
long,  rather  rigid,  digitate  or  nearly  so  at  the  end  of  a short  stiff  petiole.  Stipules 
brown,  scarious,  more  or  less  united  opposite  the  leaf.  Flowers  small,  red, 
crowded  or  distant  in  a long  narrow  terminal  raceme.  Pedicels  short,  usually  2 
together.  Bracts  narrow,  acuminate,  rigid  and  striate.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long, 
the  lobes  rather  longer  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  nearly  to  the  top. 
Petals  twice  as  long ; wings  scarcely  adhering  to  the  keel,  which  has  not  the 
lateral  appendages  of  most  Desmodia.  Ovary  with  only  two  ovules.  Pod  sessile, 
flat,  silky-pubescent ; articles  2 or  rarely  1 , nearly  orbicular,  not  2 lines  diameter, 
reticulate  and  indehiscent. — Dicerma  biarticulatum,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  339  ; Wight,  Ic. 
t.  419. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Ii.  Brown,  Hcnne ; Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller; 
Bowen  River,  Bowman ; Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallachy. 

Common  in  E.  India.  Several  of  the  Australian  specimens  are  more  erect  and  taller,  with 
longer  stipules,  bracts  and  bracteoles  than  the  Indian  ones,  but  they  do  not  otherwise  differ,  and 
others  are  precisely  like  the  Indian  form  figured  by  Wight. — Benth. 


4.  D.  acanthocladum  (spine-branched),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  122  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  231.  A glabrous  undershrub  or  small  shrub,  with  numerous  slender 
but  rigid  angular  branches,  the  smaller  ones  ending  in  a fine  thorn.  Leaflets  3, 
oblong  or  lanceolate,  the  terminal  one  4 to  lin.  long,  the  lateral  ones  smaller,  the 
common  petiole  short.  Stipules  small.  Flowering  branches  reduced  to  axillary 
leafless  spines,  usually  shorter  than  the  leaves,  and  bearing  1 or  2 pairs  or 
clusters  of  flowers  near  the  extremity.  Pedicels  short.  Bracts  very  small. 
Flowers  about  4 lines  long.  Calyx-lobes  about  as  long  as  the  tube.  Wings 
strongly  adhering  to  the  lateral  protuberances  of  the  keel.  Ovules  usually  3 or  4. 
Pod  rarely  of  more  than  2 articles  and  often  only  1,  pubescent  with  clinging  hairs, 
the  upper  suture  straight,  the  lower  deeply  and  broadly  indented,  each  article 
5 to  6 lines  long  and  about  2 broad,  tapering  to  each  end,  flat  and  indehiscent. 

Hab.:  Southern  parts. 

This  species,  different  from  all  others  of  the  genus  in  its  thorny  branchlets,  is  otherwise  more 
nearly  allied  to  the  section  Heteroloma,  subsection  Podocarpia,  than  to  Dicerma. — Benth. 


5.  Z>.  triquetrum  (branches  3-angled),  DC.;  Baker  in  Hook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind. 
ii.  163.  Branches  triquetrous,  soon,  glabrescent.  Leaflets  ovate  or  lanceolate, 
reaching  6 to  8in.  long,  acute,  rigidly  subcoriaceous,  glabrous  above,  hairy  on  the 
ribs  below.  Petiole  £ to  l£in.  long,  with  a wing  on  each  side,  like  the  leaflet  in 
texture,  1J  to  3 lines  broad.  Raceme  6 to  12in.  long,  axillary  or  terminal. 
Pedicels  ascending  1 J to  3 lines  long,  about  1 ^ line,  campanulate  ; upper  teeth 
deltoid,  lower  linear.  Pod  1 to  2in.  long,  articles  6 to  8,  glabrous  or  pubescent, 
nearly  square,  lower  suture  faintly  indented. — Baker  l.c. 

Hab.:  Southern  Queensland,  S.  H.  Eaves  (F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ix.  66). 

Also  in  India,  Ceylon,  Seychelles,  China,  and  the  Philippines. 

6.  D.  gangeticum  (Gangetic),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  327  ; Benth.  FI  Austr.  ii.  232. 
A decumbent  or  erect  herb  or  undershrub,  the  large-leaved  forms  attaining  2 or 
3ft.,  the  small  ones  slender  and  under  1ft.,  sprinkled  with  a few  hairs.  Leaves 
all  1-foliolate,  in  the  large  forms  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate  3 or  4in.  long,  in  the 
smaller  ones  broadly  ovate-cordate  or  almost  orbicular,  ^ to  lin.  long.  Racemes 
long  and  slender,  terminal  or  in  the  upper  axils.  Flowers  small,  the  pedicels  in 
pairs,  under  2 lines  long.  Bracts  linear-subulate,  persistent  to  the  time  of 
flowering,  but  falling  off  soon  after.  Calyx  about  1 line  long,  the  lobes  longer 


413 


t)esmodium .]  XLIII.  LEGUMINOS/E. 

than  the  tube.  Petals  twice  as  long.  Pod  sessile,  minutely  pubescent,  the 
upper  margin  slightly,  the  lower  deeply  indented ; articles  4 to  6,  1 to  If  line 
long  and  broad,  flat,  thin  and  indehiscent. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  ii.  125. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  Eiver,  Banks  and  Solander ; Northumberland  Islands,  R.  Brown ; Moreton 
Bay,  C.  Stuart;  Rockhampton,  Dallachy ; Broadsound,  Bowman. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago. 

7.  D.  dependens  (hanging),  Blurne ; Miq.  FI.  Inch  Batav.  i.  249.  “ Wai- 

gen,”  Barron  River,  Cowley.  A tall  climber.  Leaves  1-foliolate  ; leaflet  large, 
lanceolate-ovate,  acuminate,  about  Gin.  long,  the  under  side  somewhat  pale,  lateral 
nerves  and  veins  somewhat  prominent.  Racemes  pendulous,  1ft.  or  more  long. 
Bracts  linear-subulate.  Pedicels  1 to  8 lines  long.  Bracteoles  minute,  subulate 
below  the  calyx.  Calyx  about  If  line,  strigulose,  teeth  very  short.  Petals  white, 
glabrous.  Standard  orbicular-ovate,  the  wings  and  keel  much  smaller.  Stamens 
deciduous,  free.  Pod  on  long  stipes,  hispidulous,  articles  almost  lanceolate. 

Hab.:  Common  in  the  tropical  scrubs. 

Also  in  the  Moluccas  and  New  Guinea. 

8.  D.  brachypodum  (shortly  stipitate  pod),  A.  Gray,  Bot.  Amer.  Expl. 
Exped.  434  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  232.  A rather  rigid,  erect  or  decumbent 
perennial  of  1 to  2ft.,  slightly  pubescent,  the  specimens  often  assuming  a bluish- 
black  tint  when  dry.  Leaflets  3 or  in  the  lowest  leaves  solitary,  from  broadly 
ovate  almost  orbicular  to  oval-oblong,  very  obtuse,  mostly  1 to  2in.  long,  rather 
stiff  and  strongly  reticulate,  the  stipellfe  long.  Stipules  rather  broad,  striate, 
acuminate.  Flowers  small,  usually  in  pairs,  the  lower  ones  distant,  in  a long 
terminal  rigid  raceme.  Pedicels  very  short  and  recurved.  Bracts  subulate- 
acuminate,  persistent  to  the  time  of  flowering  but  falling  off  soon  after.  Calyx 
If  line  long,  the  lobes  not  longer  than  the  tube.  Petals  about  twice  as  long. 
Pod  sessile  or  shortly  stipitate,  pubescent  with  clinging  hairs,  the  upper  suture 
slightly,  the  lower  deeply  indented  ; articles  4 to  6,  about  2 lines  long  and  nearly 
as  broad,  thin,  reticulate  and  indehiscent. 

Hab.:  Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Port  Curtis , M'Gillivray ; Percy  Island,  A.  Cunningham  ; 
Rockhampton,  Dallachy , Bowman  ; Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller,  Leichhardt. 

9.  ID.  varians  (various^,  Endl.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mm.  i.  185  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  232.  Stock  woody  with  prostrate  diffuse  or  ascending  slender  stems  of 
f to  lfft.,  the  whole  plant  pubescent  or  nearly  glabrous.  Leaflets  3,  in  the 
lower  leaves  or  sometimes  all  broadly  obovate  or  almost  orbicular  or  obeordate, 
f to  fin.  long,  the  upper  ones  or  sometimes  nearly  all  ovate  oblong  or  almost 
linear,  f to  lin.  long.  Stipules  small,  acute.  Flowers  very  small,  in  distant 
pairs,  in  slender  terminal  racemes.  Pedicels  filiform,  short  when  in  flower, 
spreading  and  nearly  fin.  long  when  in  fruit.  Bracts  small,  persistent.  Calyx- 
lobes  acuminate,  as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  rarely  3 lines  long.  Pod  sessile, 
the  upper  suture  very  slightly,  the  lower  deeply  indented  ; articles  3 to  6, 
obliquely  ovate,  about  2 lines  long  and  not  so  broad,  flat,  indehiscent,  clothed 
with  short  clinging  hairs. — Hedysarum  varians,  Labill.  Sert.  Austr.  Caled. 
71,  t.  71. 

Hab.:  Broadsound  and  Keppel  Bay,  R.  Brown ; Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller,  C.  Stuart. 

10.  D.  rhytidophyllum  (wrinkled  leaflets),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  233.  A perennial  with  long  procumbent  almost  trailing  branches, 
softly  rusty-tomentose  or  velvety-villous.  Leaflets  3,  ovate-rhomboid  or  the 
upper  ones  rather  narrow,  obtuse,  mostly  1 to  2in.  long,  rather  thick  and  softly 
villous  on  both  sides.  Stipules  lanceolate,  striate,  often  reflexed.  Racemes  long. 
Flowers  rather  small,  in  distant  pairs.  Pedicels  slender,  rather  longer  than  the 
calyx.  Bracts  subulate-acuminate,  persistent.  Calyx  about  If  line  long,  the 


414 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[Desmodiwn. 


lobes  longer  than  the  tube.  Petals  about  twice  as  long.  Pod  almost  sessile,  the 
upper  suture  slightly,  the  lower  more  deeply  indented  ; articles  3 to  6,  about 
1^  line  long  and  nearly  as  broad,  flat,  indehiscent,  clothed  with  short  clinging 
hairs. 

Hab.:  Granite  rocks  between  Dawson  and  Burnett  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller;  near  Rockhampton, 
Dallacliy.  Common  in  south  Queensland  on  forest  land. 

The  species  is  allied  to  D.  varians,  but  much  larger  and  coarser,  with  a different  foliage  and 
indumentum.  — Benth. 

11.  D.  campylocaulon  (bent-stemmed),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  233.  Stem  diffuse  or  trailing,  elongated,  rather  stout,  slightly  pubescent. 
Leaflets  3,  lanceolate,  obtuse  or  acute,  2 to  3in.  long,  glabrous  or  nearly  so, 
strongly  veined  underneath,  the  stipelhe  very  conspicuous.  Stipules  striate,  thin. 
Racemes  mostly  leaf-opposed,  pedunculate.  Flowers  numerous.  Pedicels  solitary 
or  in  pairs,  slender  but  short.  Bracts  narrow,  usually  persistent.  Calyx  nearly 
H line  long,  the  lobes  longer  than  the  tube.  Petals  twice  as  long.  Pod  sessile, 
pubescent  when  young  with  short  clinging  hairs,  the  upper  suture  continuous, 
the  lower  indented  ; articles  3 to  6,  about  line  long  and  broad,  membranous, 
turgid  or  almost  inflated  when  ripe,  slightly  reticulate,  indehiscent. 

Hab.:  Tropical  parts  of  Queensland. 

12.  D.  nemorosum  (found  in  scrubs),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Bcntli.  FI.  Anstr,  ii. 
234.  Stems  apparently  tall,  erect,  woody  at  the  base,  clothed  as  well  as  the 
under  side  of  the  leaves  with  soft  silky  appressed  hairs.  Leaflets  3 or  solitary  in 
the  lowest  leaves,  oblong-elliptical,  very  obtuse,  1^  to  2^in.  long  or  the  lateral 
ones  smaller,  glabrous  above.  Stipules  rather  long,  striate.  Racemes  terminal. 
Bracts  broad,  membranous,  acuminate,  falling  off  long  before  the  flowering. 
Flowers  solitary  or  in  pairs  ; pedicels  very  short,  rigid,  recurved  after  flowering 
and  not  exceeding  the  calyx  when  in  fruit.  Calyx  nearly  2 lines  long,  the  lobes 
rather  broad,  acute.  Petals  nearly  twice  as  long,  the  lateral  appendages  of  the 
keel  very  prominent.  Pod  sessile,  the  upper  suture  continuous,  the  lower  rather 
deeply  and  broadly  indented  ; articles  few,  flat,  3 to  4 lines  long  and  about  half 
as  broad,  indehiscent,  pubescent  with  short  clinging  hairs. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Pine  River,  Fitzalan ; also  in  Leichhardt' s collection. 
Common  in  the  southern  riverside  scrubs. 

The  foliage  and  habit  are  nearly  those  of  the  E.  Indian  D.  concinnum,  but  the  pod  and  flowers 
are  very  different. — Benth. 

13.  D.  trichostachyum  (hairy-spiked),  Bcntli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  234.  Stems 
prostrate,  filiform,  nearly  glabrous.  Leaflets  1 or  3,  very  broadly  obcordate,  2 to 
4 lines  or  rarely  ^-in.  long,  and  sometimes  broader  than  long.  Stipules  subulate- 
acuminate.  Flowers  very  small,  distant,  in  filiform  terminal  simple  or  branched 
racemes ; pedicels  all  solitary  and  filiform.  Bracts  membranous,  lanceolate, 
falling  off  long  before  the  flowers  open.  Calyx  about  + line  long,  divided  nearly 
to  the  base  into  narrow  acute  lobes.  Pod  sessile,  the  upper  suture  straight,  the 
lower  rather  deeply  indented;  articles  3 or  4,  small,  as  broad  as  long,  thin, 
glabrous,  strongly  reticulate. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander  ; 
E.  coast,  A.  Cunningham. 

14.  D.  polycarpum  (fruit,  the  pods  numerous),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  334  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  235.  An  erect  decumbent  or  ascending  perennial  or  undershrub, 
1 to  2 or  3ft.  high  or  rarely  more,  more  or  less  pubescent,  with  short  appressed 
or  scarcely  spreading  hairs.  Leaflets  3,  the  terminal  one  obovate  or  elliptical, 
1^  to  2in.  long,  the  lateral  ones  usually  smaller.  Stipules  striate,  acuminate. 
Racemes  terminal,  dense,  1 to  near  3in.  long,  often  several  together  forming  a 
short  panicle.  Bracts  broad,  lanceolate,  imbricate  at  first,  but  falling  off  before 


Desmodium.  J 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSE. 


415 


the  flowers  expand.  Flowers  purple,  crowded,  3 to  4 lines  long.  Pods  crowded, 
erect,  hairy  or  glabrous,  about  f to  fin.  long,  the  upper  suture  continuous,  the 
lower  indented  ; articles  about  4 to  6,  flat,  usually  opening  at  the  lower  edge 
when  ripe. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  227  ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  406. 

Hab.:  Sandy  Cape,  Broadsound,  and  Northumberland  Island,  R.  Brown ; Providence  Hill,  F. 
v.  Mueller  ; Rockhampton,  Thozet. 

Extends  over  the  whole  of  E.  India,  the  Archipelago,  and  the  Pacific  Islands.  To  the 
numerous  synonyms  adduced  by  Wight  and  Arnott  must  probably  be  added  Hcdysarum  tuber- 
culosum , Labill.  Sert.,  Austr.  Caled.  t.  72. — Benth. 

15.  D.  trichocaulon  (stem  hairy),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  335  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
235.  Very  nearly  allied  to  D.  polycarpum,  with  a similar  foliage  and  the  erect 
pods  the  same,  but  the  stems  more  generally  decumbent,  more  slender,  and 
clothed  as  in  D.  Muelleri  with  long  soft  spreading  hairs,  and  the  racemes  much 
looser  and  slender. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller,  Leichhardt,  C.  Stuart. 

Not  uncommon  in  E.  India,  where  the  above-mentioned  differences  appear  to  be  constant, 
although  it  may  possibly  prove  to  be  a variety  only  of  D.  polycarpum. — Benth. 

16.  D.  reniforme  (leaflets  kidney-shaped),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  327 ; Baker  in  Hook. 
FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  173.  Stem  very  slender,  about  1ft.  long.  Leaflet 
rigidly  sub-coriaceous,  about  half  as  broad  as  long,  6 to  9 lines  long, 
truncate  or  emarginate,  glabrous.  Stipules  linear,  minute,  deciduous. 
Petioles  about  6 lines  long,  articulate  at  the  apex.  Racemes  mostly  terminal, 
loosely  10  to  20-flowered,  and  a few  flowers  solitary  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves. 
Bracts  linear  minute.  Pedicels  1 to  2 lines  long,  finally  cernuous.  Calyx  under 
1 line,  turbinate,  glabrous.  Pod  glabrous,  6 to  9 lines  long,  If  line  broad,  the 
upper  sutures  straight,  lower  slightly  indented. — Hedusarum  reniforme,  Linn. 
Brown,  FI.  Ind.  t.  52,  fig.  1. 

Hab.:  Musgrave,  Cape  York  Peninsula,  T.  Barclay -Millar ; Tringilburra  Creek,  Bellenden 
Ker  Expedition,  1889. 

Also  in  India  and  Java. 

17.  D.  Muelleri  (after  Baron  von  Mueller),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  235. 
Stems  branching  at  the  base,  apparently  ascending  or  erect,  clothed  as  well  as  the 
racemes  with  long  soft  spreading  hairs,  the  young  shoots  almost  silky.  Leaflets 
3,  oblong,  obtuse,  f to  lfin.  long,  glabrous,  or  loosely  pubescent.  Stipules 
lanceolate,  acuminate,  softly  hairy.  Racemes  terminal,  slender  ; pedicels  distant, 
solitary,  filiform,  spreading.  Bracts  broad,  lanceolate,  acuminate,  imbricate  at 
first,  but  falling  off  long  before  the  flower  expands.  Calyx  nearly  1 line  long, 
the  subulate  acuminate  lobes  longer  than  the  tube.  Pod  sessile,  rather  broad, 
the  upper  suture  straight  and  slightly  thickened,  the  lower  very  slightly  indented 
between  the  seeds ; articles  4 to  6,  as  broad  as  long,  truncate  at  both  ends,  thin 
and  flat,  with  fine  transverse  veins,  separating  but  apparently  opening  sometimes 
at  the  lower  suture  when  ripe. 

Hab.:  Bowen  River,  Bowman;  Brisbane  River. 

18.  S.  parvifolium  (small-leaved),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  334;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  235. 
A very  much-branched  diffuse  or  prostrate  slender  annual  or  perennial,  sprinkled 
with  a few  silky  hairs.  Leaves  usually  small  and  crowded  ; leaflets  3 or  rarely 
solitary,  obovate  or  oblong,  f to  nearly  fin.  long  or  rarely  more,  on  a short 
filiform  common  petiole.  Stipules  acuminate,  brown  and  scarious.  Flowers 
small,  in  short  filiform  racemes,  usually  terminating  short  lateral  branches ; 
pedicels  solitary,  filiform,  distant.  Bracts  membranous,  acuminate,  falling  off 
long  before  the  flower  expands,  and  seldom  seen.  Calyx  about  If  line  long,  the 
lobes  acuminate,  much  longer  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  only  shortly  united. 
Petals  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx.  Pod  sessile,  glabrous  or  minutely  pubescent, 


416 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Desmodium. 


the  upper  suture  straight  or  slightly  indented,  and  often  more  or  less  dilated,  the 
lower  more  deeply  indented  ; articles  2 to  4,  thin,  flat,  with  very  fine  transverse 
reticulations,  scarcely  separating  from  each  other  and  sometimes  perhaps  opening 
on  the  lower  edge. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay  to  Rockingham  Bay. 

The  species  is  common  in  India,  extending  over  the  Archipelago  and  into  S.  China.  This  and 
D.  Muelleri  seem  to  connect  the  section  Sagotia,  founded  on  the  common  tropical  D.  trijlorum , 
DC.,  with  D.  trichostachyum  and  D.  neurocarpum  (N.  Australia),  which  I have  referred  doubtfully 
to  Heteroloma,  although  they  have  the  solitary  pedicels  of  Sagotia.  They  all  come  very  near 
in  habit  to  some  of  the  looser-flowered  species  of  the  section  Nicolsonia,  but  the  pod  is  much  less 
disposed  to  open  on  the  lower  edge. — Benth. 


45.  PYCNOSPORA,  R.  Br. 

(Seeds  dense.) 

Calyx,  2 upper  lobes  united  into  one.  Standard  nearly  orbicular,  narrowed  at 
the  base  ; wings  adhering  to  the  keel ; keel  obtuse,  with  small  lateral  appendages. 
Upper  stamen  free,  or  at  first  united  with  the  others,  anthers  uniform.  Ovary 
sessile,  with  several  ovules.  Style  subulate,  with  a terminal  stigma.  Pod 
oblong,  turgid,  2-valved,  transversely  veined.  Seeds  several,  not  strophiolate. — 
An  undershrub,  with  the  habit  of  Desmodium.  Leaves  pinnately  8-foliolate  or 
1-foliolate,  with  stipellae.  Flowers  small,  in  terminal  racemes  or  panicles. 

The  genus  consists  of  a single  species,  extending  over  the  Indian  Archipelago  to  S.  China.  It 
is  very  nearly  allied  to  Desmodium,  except  in  the  pod  (nearly  that  of  Crotalaria),  which  would 
technically  remove  it  from  Hedysarece,  but  it  has  no  immediate  affinities  in  any  other  tribe. — 
Benth. 

1 P.  hedysaroides  (Hedysarum-like),  E.  Br.  in  W.  and  Am.  Prod.  197  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  236.  Stock  perennial,  with  several  decumbent  or  ascending 
branched  stems,  1 to  2ft.  long,  pubescent  or  hairy.  Leaves  pinnately 
3-foliolate ; leaflets  obovate  or  obovate-oblong,  the  terminal  one  in  some 
specimens  scarcely  -gin.,  in  others  above  lin.  long,  the  lateral  one  usually 
smaller  or  sometimes  wanting.  Stipules  striate,  subulate-acuminate,  frequently 
deciduous.  Flowers  about  2 lines  long,  purplish,  in  terminal  slender  racemes  of 
2 to  3in.,  or  occasionally  longer  and  branching  into  panicles  ; pedicels  short 
in  pairs.  Bracts  rather  broad,  acuminate,  membranous,  striate,  falling  off  long 
before  the  flower  expands.  Pod  3 to  4 lines  long,  very  turgid,  slightly  pubescent, 
the  valves  thin,  with  very  fine  transverse  reticulations.  Seeds  6 to  8 small, 
reniform, — P.  nervosa,  W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  197. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  B.  Brown;  Broadsound,  R.  Brown,  Boivman ; Dunk  Island, 
M'Gillivray ; Rockingham  Bay,  Rockhampton,  Gin  Gin,  &c. 


46.  URARIA,  Desv. 

(Origin  doubtful.) 

Calyx-lobes  subulate-acuminate,  spreading,  the  2 upper  ones  (lowest  by  the 
resupination  of  the  flower)  shorter.  Standard  orbicular  or  obovate,  narrowed  into 
the  claw ; wings  adhering  to  the  obtuse  keel.  Upper  stamen  free,  the  others 
united  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile  or  nearly  so,  with  2 or  more  ovules ; 
style  filiform  with  a capitate  terminal  stigma.  Pod  nearly  sessile,  contracted 
between  the  seeds  ; articles  ovate,  folded  back  upon  each  other  within  the  calyx. — 
Herbs  or  undershrubs.  Leaves  pinnate  of  3,  rarely  5 or  7 leaflets,  or  sometimes 
of  a single  terminal  leaflet,  usually  prominently  reticulate,  with  stipellae.  Stipules 
free,  acuminate,  striate.  Flowers  purplish  or  yellowish,  in  terminal  racemes 
either  slender  and  elongated  or  dense  and  spike-like,  the  pedicels  in  pairs, 
indexed  at  the  top  so  as  to  reverse  the  flowers.  Bracts  usually  broad,  acuminate ; 
bracteoles  none. 


Uraria.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^. 


417 


An  Asiatic  and  African  tropical  genus,  with  one  or  two  species  naturalised  in  some  parts  of 
tropical  America.  Of  the  Australian  species,  two  are  common  Asiatic  ones,  the  third  appears  to 
be  endemic. — Benth. 


Upper  leaves  of  3 or  5 long  narrow  leaflets.  Eaceme  long  and  slender.  Pod 

of  3 to  6 articles 1.  U.  picta. 

Leaves  mostly  of  3 oblong  leaflets.  Raceme  cylindrical,  dense  and  spike- 
like. Pod  of  2 articles.  Bracts  persistent 2.  TJ.  cylindracea. 

Leaves  mostly  of  1 very  broad  leaflet.  Raceme  oblong,  dense  and  spike-like. 

Pod  of  2 articles.  Bracts  deciduous 3.  17.  layopoides. 


1.  U.  picta  (painted),  Desv.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  324;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  237. 
An  undershrub  with  ascending  or  erect  stems  of  1 to  3ft.,  loosely  pubescent  or 
villous.  Lower  leaves  occasionally  of  1 ovate  leaflet,  the  others  of  3,  5,  or  rarely 
7 leaflets,  from  ovate  lanceolate  to  narrow  oblong-lanceolate,  2 to  4 or  even  5in. 
long,  obtuse  or  almost  acute,  glabrous  or  scabrous-pubescent,  the  Asiatic  speci- 
mens often  variegated  with  white  along  the  midrib.  Racemes  long  and  slender, 
often  attaining  6 to  8in.  in  fruit.  Bracts  ovate,  falling  off  long  before  the  flower 
expands.  Pedicels  short,  hispid-villous.  Calyx-lobes  setaceous,  plumose,  rather 
above  1 line  long,  the  upper  ones  rather  shorter.  Petals  more  than  twice  as  long. 
Pod  of  3 to  6 small  glabrous  articles. — Wight,  Ic.  t.  411. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  It.  Brown;  Rockhampton,  Thozet,  Dallacliy ; Bowen  River,  Bowman; 
Logan  River,  Rev.  B.  Scorteckini. 

Widely  spread  over  tropical  Asia  and  Africa  and  introduced  into  the  West  Indies.  The 
Australian  specimens  have  the  leaflets  usually  all  green,  and  often  3 or  1 only,  but  in  some  the 
leaves  are  nearly  all  5-foliolate,  as  in  the  Asiatic  ones. —Benth. 

2.  U.  cylindracea  (cylindrical),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  237.  An  undershrub 
with  decumbent  or  ascending  stems,  loosely  pubescent  or  rusty-villous.  Leaflets 
3 or  very  rarely  1,  ovate-oblong,  obtuse,  the  terminal  one  usually  \\  to  3in.  long, 
the  lateral  ones  smaller,  slightly  scabrous  above,  softly  pubescent  underneath. 
Racemes  dense,  but  more  elongated  than  in  U.  layopoides,  often  attaining  Sin. 
when  in  fruit.  Bracts  broadly  ovate,  softly  villous,  persistent.  Pedicels  rather 
longer  than  the  calyx.  Calyx-lobes  subulate-plumose  as  in  TJ.  layopoides,  but  the 
upper  ones  much  shorter.  Pod  of  2 articles,  the  pericarp  thin  but  strongly 
reticulate. 

Hab.:  Port  Denison,  Fitzalan ; Sweers  Island,  Henne. 

With  the  inflorescence  and  habit  of  U.  lag  opus,  DC.,  which  has  not  yet  been  found  in 
Australia,  this  species  has  the  2-ovulate  ovary  and  the  pod  of  U.  layopoides. — Benth. 

3.  U.  lagopoides  (like  hare’s  foot),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  324;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
237.  Stock  short  and  woody  or  shortly  creeping,  with  procumbent  or  ascending 
stems  of  | to  l^ft.,  pubescent  or  loosely  villous.  L eaflets  solitary  or  3,  the  single 
or  terminal  one  from  orbicular-reniform  to  broadly  cordate-ovate,  always  very 
obtuse,  1 to  2in,  long,  slightly  scabrous  or  loosely  pubescent,  the  lateral  ones 
when  present  smaller.  Stipules  subulate-acuminate.  Racemes  contracted  into 
a very  dense  oblong  obtuse  hirsute  spike,  of  1 to  2in.,  nearly  sessile  above  the  last 
leaves.  Bracts  broadly  ovate,  acuminate,  usually  very  deciduous,  except  some- 
times at  the  base  of  the  spike.  Pedicels  shorter  than  the  calyx.  Calyx  lower 
lobes  (turned  upwards  by  the  inflexion  of  the  pedicel)  subulate-plumose,  2 to  3 
lines  long,  the  upper  ones  much  shorter  with  a broad  base.  Petals  not  much 
longer  than  the  calyx,  on  slender  claws.  Ovules  2.  Pod  of  2 ovate,  somewhat 
turgid,  reticulate  articles,  each  about  1^  line  long,  glabrous  or  rarely  pubescent. — 
Wight,  Ic.  t.  289  ; U.  cercifolia,  Desv.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  325. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  R.  Brown;  Brisbane  River,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Rockhampton,  Thozet. 

Widely  dispersed  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago. 


418 


XLI1I.  LEGUMINOS/E. 


47.  ALYSICARPUS,  Neck. 

(Pods  chain-like.) 

Calyx  deeply  cleft,  the  lobes  stiff  and  dry,  the  two  uppermost  often  united  into 
one.  Standard  obovate  or  orbicular,  narrowed  into  the  claw ; wings  adhering  to 
the  obtuse  keel.  Upper  stamen  free,  the  others  united  ; anthers  reniform.  Ovary 
sessile  or  nearly  so,  with  several  ovules  ; style  filiform,  with  a capitate  stigma. 
Pod  erect,  straight,  nearly  terete,  or  somewhat  flattened  but  thick,  narrowed 
between  the  seeds  or  equal ; articles  ovate,  globular,  or  truncate  at  both  ends, 
indehiscent. — Herbs,  either  glabrous  or  loosely  hairy.  Leaves  of  a single  leaflet 
(or  very  rarely,  in  species  not  Australian,  3-foliolate),  with  stipellas.  Stipules 
dry,  striate,  acuminate,  free,  or  united  opposite  the  leaf.  Flowers  small,  in 
slender  terminal  or  rarely  axillary  racemes,  the  pedicels  usually  in  pairs.  Bracts 
scarious. 

The  genus  is  generally  spread  over  tropical  Asia  and  Africa,  one  species  having  also  established 
itself  in  some  parts  of  America.  The  two  Queensland  species  are  both  common  Indian  ones. 


Calyx  small,  with  very  narrow  lobes.  Pod  several  times  longer,  not  con- 
tracted, but  with  slightly  raised  transverse  lines  between  the  seeds  ....  1.  A.  vaginalis. 

Calyx  with  lanceolate,  rigid,  not  striate  lobes  overlapping  each  other.  Pod 
shortly  exserted,  much  contracted  between  the  seeds,  articles  deeply  marked 
with  transverse  wrinkles 2.  A.  rugosus. 


The  common  Indian  A.  monilifer,  DC.,  with  smooth  globular  bead-like  articles  to  the  pod, 
may  very  likely  be  found  also  in  tropical  Australia. — Benth. 

1.  A.  vaginalis  (sheathed),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  353  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  239. 
A perennial,  tufted  or  much  branched  at  the  base,  the  stems  decumbent  or 
ascending,  from  a few  inches  to  above  a foot  long,  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent. 
Leaves  on  short  slender  petioles,  the  lower  ones  cordate-orbicular  or  oval,  not  fin. 
long,  the  upper  ones  from  oval-oblong  to  lanceolate-linear,  and  often  lin.  long  or 
more,  all  obtuse.  Racemes  slender,  terminal  or  at  length  leaf-opposed  ; pedicels 
short,  in  rather  distant  pairs.  Flowers  very  small.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long, 
the  lobes  very  narrow,  ending  in  a subulate  almost  hair-like  point,  the  two  upper 
ones  less  united  than  in  most  species.  Petals  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx.  Pod 
often  fin.  long  or  rather  more,  slightly  compressed,  obscurely  wrinkled,  the 
separation  of  the  articles  marked  by  transverse  raised  lines,  without  any  or  rarely 
with  a slight  contraction. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  233  ; A.  nummular icefolim,  DC. 
Prod.  ii.  353  ; W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  232. 

Hab.:  Burdekin  River  and  Broadsound,  Bowman. 

Common  in  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  and  introduced  into  other  parts  of  the  world. — 
Benth. 

2.  A.  rugOSUS  (rough),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  353;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  239.  An 
annual  or  biennial,  with  procumbent  ascending  or  erect  stems,  attaining  1 to  2ft., 
but  sometimes  low  and  short,  pubescent  or  loosely  hairy.  Leaves  articulate  on  a 
short  petiole,  the  lowest  ovate,  obtuse,  f to  lin.  long,  the  upper  ones  lanceolate 
or  linear,  1 to  3in.  Racemes  in  the  Australian  form  rather  long,  softly  hairy. 
Bracts  ovate-lanceolate,  striate,  but  falling  off  as  in  the  other  species  long  before 
the  flower  expands.  Pedicels  in  distant  pairs,  much  shorter  than  the  calyx. 
Calyx  about  3f  lines  long,  divided  almost  to  the  base  into  4 lanceolate  acute  dry 
stiff  lobes,  overlapping  each  other  on  the  edges  and  not  striate,  the  upper  one 
(formed  of  2 united)  slightly  notched.  Petals  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx  or 
rather  shorter.  Pod  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx,  contracted  between  the  seeds, 
into  3,  4 or  rarely  5 articles,  as  broad  as  or  broader  than  long,  strongly  marked 
with  transverse  wrinkles. — Hedysarum  rugosum,  Willd.  Sp.  PL  iii.  1172  ; 
A.  cylindricux,  Desv.  in  Ann.  Linn.  Soc.  Par.  1825,  301,  as  quoted  by  him  in 
Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ix.  417. 

Hab.:  Bowen  River,  Bowman. 

The  species  is  common  in  tropical  Asia  and  Africa,  where  it  varies  much,  sometimes  low  and 
diffuse,  with  almost  all  the  leaves  obovate  or  broadly  oblong,  sometimes  tall  and  almost  erect, 


A lysicarpus.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS.E. 


419 


with  nearly  all  the  leaves  lanceolate  or  linear.  It  includes  A.  styracifolia,  W.  and  Arn.  Prod. 
234,  with  short  dense  very  hairy  racemes  and  A.  Wallicliii , W.  and  Arn.  l.c.,  with  elongated 
nearly  glabrous  racemes.  The  Australian  specimens  have  the  habit  of  the  latter  with  the  hairs 
nearly  of  the  former.  De  Candolle’s  specimen  of  A.  styracifolia  is  nearer  to  A.  Wallichii,  W. 
and  Arn.  The  original  Hedysarum  styracifolmm,  Linn.,  is  very  properly  referred  by  W.  and 
Arn.  to  a very  different  plant,  Desmodium  retroflexum,  DC.,  which  is  surely  a true  Desrnodium 
(sect.  Nicolsonia),  not  an  Uraria.  Alysicarpus  Heyneanus,  W.  and  Arn.  l.c.,  must  probably  be 
considered  as  another  form  of  A.  rugosus. — Bentli. 

48.  LESPEDEZA,  Mich. 

(After  M.  Lespedeza.) 

Calyx-lobes  or  teeth  nearly  equal  or  the  two  upper  ones  shortly  united. 
Standard  orbicular,  obovate  or  oblong,  narrowed  into  a claw,  or  rarely  obtuse  at 
the  base  ; wings  free  ; keel  obtuse  or  rostrate.  Upper  stamen  free  or  rarely  united 
with  the  others ; anthers  reniform.  Ovary  sessile  or  stipitate,  with  a single 
ovule ; style  filiform,  with  a small  terminal  stigma.  Pod  ovate  or  orbicular,  flat, 
reticulate,  indehiscent. — Herbs,  undershrubs  or  shrubs.  ‘Leaves  pinnately  3-folio- 
late  or  rarely  1-foliolate  ; leaflets  entire,  without  stipellae.  Stipules  free,  usually 
small  or  very  deciduous.  Flowers  purple  pink  or  white,  in  axillary  clusters  or, 
in  species  not  Australian,  in  axillary  racemes  or  terminal  panicles. 

The  genus  is  spread  over  North  America,  temperate,  especially  eastern  Asia,  and  the  moun- 
tains of  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago. 

1.  I>.  cuneata  (wedge  shaped),  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  307 ; Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  240.  Kootstock  thick  and  woody;  stems  several,  decumbent  ascending 
or  erect,  stiff  and  but  little  branched,  usually  1 to  2,  but  sometimes  3 or  4ft. 
long,  hoary-pubescent  or  at  length  glabrous.  Leaves  usually  crowded,  the  leaflets 
linear-cuneate,  mostly  under  |in.,  but  occasionally  f or  even  lin.  long,  hoary  or 
silky  underneath,  the  common  petiole  1 to  3 or  rarely  4 lines  long.  Stipules 
small,  subulate.  Flowers  pink-purple,  in  dense  axillary  clusters  ; those  in  the 
upper  axils  nearly  all  complete,  about  3 lines  long,  those  of  the  lower  clusters 
mostly  apetalous,  with  imperfect  stamens.  Calyx  line  long,  the  lobes  rigid, 
very  acute,  longer  than  the  tube,  the  two  upper  ones  united  to  the  middle. 
Bracteoles  ovate-lanceolate,  acute.  Keel  curved,  obtuse.  Pod  sessile,  nearly 
orbicular,  slightly  acute,  1 to  1^  line  diameter. — L.  juncea,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  348,  in 
part ; Miq.  FI.  Ind.  Bat.  i.  part  1,  230,  but  not  the  Siberian  L.  juncea,  Pers. 

Hab.:  Plentiful  in  southern  Queensland. 

49.  * VICIA,  Linn. 

(Having  binding,  clasping  tendrils.) 

Calyx-tube  oblique,  the  teeth  subequal.  Standard  obovate,  narrowed  into  a 
broad  claw ; keel  shorter  than  the  wings.  Stamens  usually  diadelphous,  the 
sheath  with  a very  oblique  mouth.  Ovary  subsessile  or  stipitate,  2 or  many- 
ovulate.  Style  inflexed,  filiform  or  slightly  flattened,  bearded  at  the  apex  or 
pubescent  throughout.  Pod  compressed,  2-valved,  2 or  many-seeded. — Herbs, 
with  equally  pinnate  leaves  ending  in  a twisting  tendril. 

A large  genus,  spread  over  the  temperate  regions  of  both  hemispheres. 


Pod  glabrous,  6 to  9-seeded.  Flowers  middle-sized,  solitary,  sessile 1.  V.  sativa. 

Pod  hairy,  2-seeded 2.  V.  hirsuta 


Subgenera  I.  Euvicia. — Annuals  or  perennials,  with  the  style  conspicuously 
bearded  on  the  lower  side  at  the  tip. 

1.  V.  sativa  (cultivated),  Linn.;  var.  segetalis,  Ser.  An  annual  or  biennial, 
from  a few  inches  to  2 or  3ft.  high,  with  about  4 to  7 pairs  of  leaflets,  and  sessile 
usually  solitary  purple  flowers. 

Hab.:  This  and  some  other  varieties  have  become  weeds  in  cultivation  paddocks. 


420  XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E.  [Vida. 

Subgenera  II.  Ervum. — Annuals,  with  flowers  in  sparse  pedunculate  racemes, 
rarely  solitary.  Style  finely  downy  all  round  near  the  tip. 

2.  V.  hirsuta  (hairy),  Koch.  Syn.  191  ; Baker  in  FI.  Trop.  Afr.  ii.  173. 
Stems  annual,  slender,  trailing,  pubescent.  Stipules  linear-lanceolate,  with  1 or 
more  setaceous  teeth.  Leaflets  in  8 to  10  pairs,  linear.  Flowers  3 to  6 in  a 
stalked  dense  raceme,  about  1^  line  deep,  teeth  linear.  Style  slightly  compressed. 
Pod  4 lines  long,  2 lines  broad,  hairy,  2-seeded. — Ervum  ldrsutum,  Linn. 

Hab.:  A stray  from  cultivation  in  south  Queensland. 

50.  ABRUS,  Linn. 

(Leaves  soft  and  tender.) 

Calyx  campanulate,  truncate,  or  shortly  and  broadly  toothed.  Standard  ovate, 
the  short  claw  adhering  to  the  base  of  the  staminal  tube  ; keel  much  curved,  the 
petals  united  from  the  base,  often  longer  than  the  wings.  Stamens  9,  united  in 
a sheath  open  on  the  upper  side,  the  upper  one  deficient.  Ovary  sessile,  with 
several  ovules ; style  short,  incurved  ; stigma  terminal.  Pod  oblong  or  linear, 
flat,  2-valved,  with  cellular  partitions  between  the  seeds,  seeds  not  strophiolate. 
Stems  usually  twining  or  trailing,  woody  at  the  base.  Leaves  abruptly  pinnate, 
with  several  pairs  of  small  leaflets,  without  stipelke,  the  common  petiole  ending 
in  a short  point.  Racemes  terminal  or  axillary,  the  flowers  in  clusters  on  lateral 
thickened  nodes.  Bracts  minute  or  none,  bracteoles  none. 

A small  genus  dispersed  over  the  tropical  regions  both  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World,  the 
only  Australian  species  extending  over  the  whole  range.  It  is  in  some  measure  intermediate 
between  the  tribes  Viciece,  Phaseolece,  and  Dalbergiece. — Benth. 

(Placed  in  Phaseolece  in  FI.  Austr.,  and  in  Viciece  by  the  authors  of  the  Gen.  Plant.) 

1.  A.  precatorius  (prayer;  seeds  used  for  rosaries),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii. 
381;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  270.  Seed  called  Jequerity.  “ Do-anjin-jin,”  Batavia 
River,  “ Pun-dir  Pun-dir,”  Cooktown,  Both.  Glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent. 
Leaflets  7 to  10  pairs,  oblong-elliptical  or  nearly  obovate,  usually  about  ^in.  long. 
Racemes  with  1 or  2 leaves,  or  at  least  with  a leafless  pair  of  stipules  below  the 
flowers,  the  flowering  part  lin.  or  rather  more  in  length,  the  nodes  rather  crowded. 
Flowers  pink,  or  rarely  white  or  purple,  5 or  G lines  long,  the  keel  narrow,  longer 
than  the  wings.  Pod  sessile,  about  2in.  long  and  G lines  broad,  almost  squared 
at  both  ends  and  attached  by  the  inner  angle,  glabrous  or  scaly  outside.  Seeds 
usually  black  with  a large  scarlet  spot,  sometimes  brown  with  a darker  spot,  or 
white  and  unspotted. — Lam.  Illust.  t.  608,  f.  i.;  W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  i.  236;  A. 
paucijiorus,  Desv.  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ix.  418  ; A.  squamulosus,  E.  Mey,  Comm.  PI. 
Afr.  Austr.  126. 

Hab.:  From  Burnett  to  Cape  York,  and  islands  of  Torres  Straits,  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Ac.. 

A very  common  coast  twiner,  frequent  also  (but  perhaps  naturalised,  Bentham  says)  in  several 
parts  of  South  America. 


51.  CLITORIA,  Linn. 

(From  clitoris , supposed  resemblance  in  flower.) 

(Neurocarpum,  Desv.) 

Calyx  tubular,  the  two  upper  lobes  slightly  connate,  the  lowest  narrow. 
Standard  large,  erect,  open,  narrowed  at  the  base  without  auricles ; wings 
shorter,  spreading,  adhering  to  the  keel  in  the  middle ; keel  shorter,  incurved, 
acute.  Upper  stamen  free  or  more  or  less  united  with  the  others  ; anthers 
uniform.  Ovary  stipitate,  with  several  ovules,  style  elongated,  incurved,  more 
or  less  dilated  upwards  and  bearded  longitudinally  on  the  inner  side.  Pod  linear, 
flattened,  the  upper  or  both  sutures  thickened,  the  sides  flat  or  convex,  occa- 
sionally bearing  a raised  longitudinal  rib.  Seeds  globose  or  flattened,  without 


Clitoria.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


421 


any  stropkiole. — Herbs  or  shrubs,  short  and  erect  or  with  long  twining  branches. 
Leaves  pinnate  with  3 or  several  leaflets,  or  occasionally  only  1,  usually  stipellate. 
Stipules  persistent,  striate.  Flowers  large,  solitary  or  clustered  in  the  axils,  or  in 
pairs  crowded  in  short  racemes.  Bracts  stipule-like,  persistent,  the  lower  ones 
in  pairs,  the  upper  ones  united  into  one.  Bracteoles  like  the  bracts  or  larger, 
persistent. 

A considerable  American  genus,  with  a few  African  and  Asiatic  tropical  species.  The  genus 
is  readily  distinguished  by  its  large  tubular  calyx. — Benth. 


Stems  erect,  flexuose.  Leaflets  1 or  3 1.  C.  australis 

Stems  climbing.  Leaflets  5 to  7 2.  C.  ternatea 


1.  C.  australis  (Australian),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  242.  Stems  herbaceous 
but  hard,  erect,  flexuose,  1 to  2ft.  high,  scarcely  branched,  pubescent  with 
appressed  silky  hairs.  Leaflets  1 or  3,  ovate,  obtuse,  rarely  shortly  acuminate, 
l\  to  2|in.  long,  glabrous  above,  silky-pubescent  underneath,  the  lateral  ones 
when  present  smaller  and  at  a distance  from  the  terminal  one.  Stipules  broadly 
lanceolate.  Peduncles  axillary,  very  short,  bearing  a cluster  of  2 or  3 pairs  of 
white  flowers  nearly  ljin.  long.  Bracts  narrow,  acuminate.  Calyx  about  fin. 
long,  the  lobes  acuminate  and  acute,  about  as  long  as  the  tube.  Standard  nearly 
l^in.  long,  wings  and  keel  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx.  Pod  not  seen. 

Hab.:  ? This  is  given  because  I have  received  from  North  Queensland  fragments  which 
likely  belong  to  this  plant. 

2.  *c.  ternatea  (from  Ternateon,  of  the  Molucca  Islands),  Linn.;  DC. 
Prod.  ii.  223.  A wide-climbing  plant  with  slender  slightly  pubescent  stems. 
Leaves  imparipinnate,  with  5 to  7 subcoriaceous  stipellate  oblong  leaflets  1 to  2in. 
long.  Flowers  solitary  on  short  pedicels  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves.  Bracteoles 
round,  3 to  6 lines  long.  Calyx  6 to  9 lines  long,  the  oblong-lanceolate  teeth  half 
as  long  as  the  tube.  Corolla  15  to  18  lines  long,  standard  bright  blue  or  white 
with  an  orange  throat  lin.  or  more  broad.  Pod  linear,  3 to  4in.  long,  8 to 
10-seeded. — Bot.  Mag.  t.  1542  ; Ternatea  vulgaris,  H.  B.  K.  Nov.  Gen.  vi.  415. 

Hab.:  A stray  from  garden  culture  in  most  tropical  countries.  Common  in  tropical  Queens- 
land scrubs. 


52.  GLYCINE,  Linn. 

(The  roots  of  some  species  sweet.) 

(Leptolobium,  altered  to  Leptocyamus,  Bentli.) 

Calyx  2 upper  lobes  united  in  a 2-toothed  or  2-lobed  upper  lip.  Standard 
nearly  orbicular,  without  inflexed  auricles  at  the  base  ; wings  narrow,  slightly 
adhering  to  the  keel ; keel  obtuse,  shorter  than  the  wings.  Upper  stamen  at  first 
united  with  the  others  in  a closed  tube,  often  becoming  at  length  free ; anthers 
uniform.  Ovary  nearly  sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; style  short,  incurved,  with  a 
terminal  stigma.  Pod  linear  or  falcate,  2-valved,  with  a pithy  substance  between 
the  seeds,  the  base  of  the  style  forming  a very  short  straight  or  rarely  hooked 
point.  Seeds  not  strophiolate. — Twining  or  prostrate  herbs,  with  a perennial 
often  thick  or  woody  rootstock  and  usually  pubescent  or  villous.  Leaflets  3,  or 
rarely  5 or  7,  in  opposite  pairs,  entire  or  rarely  sinuately  3-lobed,  stipitate. 
Flowers  usually  very  small,  in  axillary  racemes,  singly  scattered  along  the 
rhachis,  the  lower  ones  often  solitary  or  clustered  in  the  axils  without  a common 
peduncle,  and  sometimes  without  or  almost  without  petals.  Bracts  small, 
setaceous  ; bracteoles  narrow  or  minute,  usually  persistent. 

The  genus  as  now  limited,  comprising  Soja,  DC.,  and  Johnia , Wight  and  Arn.,  neither  of  them 
Australian,  extends  over  tropical  and  subtropical  Africa  and  Asia.  The  following  species 
belong  to  a section  Leptocyamus,  differing  from  the  others  only  in  the  flowers  being  distinct 
from  each  other,  not  clustered  along  the  rhachis  of  the  raceme.  Two  of  these  species  are  also 
found  in  the  Indian  Archipelago,  the  remaining  three  are  endemic,  some  of  them  perhaps 


422 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[ Glycine . 


reducible  to  varieties  of  G.  clandestina  or  G.  tabacina.  They  have  by  some  been  included  in 
Kennedya,  and  supposed  to  have  the  strophiole  of  that  genus.  I have,  however,  never  found  any 
real  strophiole,  although  the  funicle,  as  in  many  other  Pliaseolca,  expands  into  a thin  white 
membrane  covering  the  hilum,  fragments  of  which  may  remain  attached  to  the  seed  after  its 


separation  from  the  funicle. — Benth. 

Terminal  leaflets  sessile  between  the  2 others  or  the  3 very  shortly  and 
equally  petiolulate. 

Stems  short.  Leaflets  1 to  2in.  long,  very  hirsute.  Pods  falcate,  broad. 

Upper  calyx-lobes  free  from  the  middle 1.  G.falcata. 

Stems  slender,  twining.  Pod  linear,  nearly  straight.  Upper  calyx-lobes 
free  from  the  middle 2.  G.  clandestine. 

Terminal  leaflet  inserted  at  some  distance  from  the  lateral  ones. 

Pubescent  hirsute  or  nearly  glabrous.  Leaflets  of  the  lowest  leaves  short 
and  broad,  of  the  upper  ones  ovate-lanceolate,  lanceolate  or  almost 
linear 3.  G.  tabacina. 

Silky  with  closely  appressed  pubescence.  Leaflets  linear-acute  ....  4.  G.  sericea. 

Softly  tomentose  or  villous.  Leaflets  ovate  or  oblong,  all  obtuse  . . . . 5.  G.  tomentosa. 


1.  Gr.  falcata  (Boomerang-shaped),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  243.  Stems 
short,  decumbent  or  perhaps  erect,  hirsute  with  reflexed  hairs.  Leaflets 
3,  the  central  one  sessile  between  the  others,  all  lanceolate  or  oblong, 
1 to  2in.  long,  villous,  on  a long  hirsute  common  petiole.  Stipules  striate, 
larger  than  in  the  other  species.  Flowers  all  racemose,  on  long  hirsute  erect 
peduncles.  Pedicels  very  short.  Calyx  silky-villous,  2 to  2|  lines  long,  the  lobes 
nearly  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  to  about  the  middle. 
Standard  rather  narrower  than  in  the  other  species.  Pods  reflexed,  very 
hirsute,  falcate,  4 to  fin.  long  and  fully  2 lines  broad,  but  not  ripe  in  the 
specimens  seen. 

Hab.:  Sutton  River,  D'Orsay,  and  other  inland  localities. 


2.  Gr.  clandestina  (clandestine),  Wendl.  Bot.  Beov.  54  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  243.  Stems  slender,  twining,  more  or  less  hirsute  with  reflexed  hairs. 
Leaflets  3,  the  terminal  one  inserted  close  between  the  2 lateral  ones  or  very 
rarely  here  and  there  slightly  raised  above  them,  those  of  the  lower  leaves  often 
broadly  obovate,  about  4in.  long,  those  of  the  upper  ones  narrow-lanceolate  or 
linear,  4 to  14in.  long  or  more,  acute,  either  nearly  glabrous  above  and  pubescent 
with  appressed  hairs  underneath,  or  silky- villous  on  both  sides.  Stipules  minute. 
Racemes  in  the  upper  axils  usually  exceeding  the  leaves,  the  flowers  about  4 lines 
long,  scattered  along  the  upper  half  of  the  peduncle,  the  pedicels  either  very 
short  or  nearly  as  long  as  the  calyx  ; in  the  lower  part  of  the  plant  the  flowers 
are  smaller,  often  without  any  or  with  imperfect  petals,  and  solitary  or  clustered 
in  the  axils,  without  a common  peduncle.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long,  the  2 upper 
lobes  united  to  the  middle  or  nearly  distinct.  Pod  linear,  straight,  £ to  lin.  long, 
with  a minute  terminal  straight  or  hooked  point.  Seeds  nearly  orbicular  or 
transversely  oblong,  smooth  or  rough  with  raised  dots,  often  different  in  the 
racemose  and  in  the  axillary  pods. — 1)C.  Prod.  ii.  241  ; Leptolobium  clandestinum, 
Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  125  ; Leptocyamus  clandestinus,  Benth.  in  Hook.  f. 
FI.  Tasm.  i.  102  ; Teramnus  clandestinus,  Spr.  Syst.  Veg.  iii.  235  ; Leptolobium 
microphyllum,  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  125  ; Glycine  minima,  Willd.  Enum. 
756,  from  the  diagnosis  copied  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  241. 

Hab.:  A most  variable  plant  common  throughout  Queensland. 

Var.  sericea.  Silky-pubescent  or  villous.  Calyx  very  rusty-villous.  Pedicels  very  short.  To 
this  form  belong  all  the  W.  Australian,  most  of  the  S.  Australian  specimens,  and  a few  only  of 
those  from  the  other  colonies. — Benth. 

3.  Gr.  tabacina  (Tobacco-like),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  244.  Slender,  twining, 
pubescent  or  villous.  Leaflets  3,  the  lateral  ones  always  at  a distance  from  the 
terminal  one,  those  of  the  lower  leaves  orbicular  obovate  or  oblong  and  usually 
obtuse,  in  the  upper  leaves  ovate-lanceolate,  lanceolate  or  almost  linear  and 


Glycine.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


423 


usually  acute,  mostly  f to  lin.,  rarely  If  or  2in.  long.  Stipules  small.  Racemes 
slender,  elongated,  the  flowers  distant,  usually  about  4 lines  long,  on  very  short 
pedicels ; in  the  lower  part  of  the  plant  the  flowers  often  axillary  and  solitary  or  2 
or  3 together  as  in  other  species.  Calyx-lobes  subulate-acuminate,  shorter  than 
the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  to  about  the  middle.  Pod  straight,  glabrous  or 
villous,  f to  above  lin.  long,  the  terminal  point  very  short  or  rarely  rather  longer 
and  hooked.  Seeds  smooth  or  tuberculate. — Kennedya  tabacina,  Labill.  Sert. 
Austr.  Caled.  70,  t.  70 ; Leptolobium  tabacinurn,  and  L.  elonyatum,  Benth.  in  Ann. 
Wien.  Mus.  ii.  125  ; Desmodium  Novo-Hollandicum,  F.  v.  M.  in  Linmea,  xxv.  394. 

Hab.:  Bustard  Bay,  Banks  and  Solander;  Keppel  Bay,  Thirsty  Sound,  R.  Brown;  Moreton 
Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller,  G.  Stuart ; Rockhampton,  Dallachy ; in  the  interior  on  the  Maranoa, 
Mitchell;  and  Condamine  River,  Leichhardt.  Common  throughout  the  colony. 

The  species  is  also  in  New  Caledonia,  the  Fiji  and  other  islands  of  the  South  Pacific.  The 
most  slender  and  glabrescent  forms  approach  G.  clandestina,  but  may  be  always  known  by  the 
terminal  leaflet  distinctly  raised  above  the  others  ; the  more  common  hirsute  variety  differs  from 
G.  tomentosa  in  the  upper  leaflets  almost  always  narrow  and  acute,  the  less  deeply  divided  calyx, 
&c.  Among  the  numerous  varieties  the  two  following  are  the  most  prominent. — Benth. 

Var.  uncinata.  Very  hirsute.  Pod  hooked  at  the  end,  although  not  so  much  so  as  in 
Teramnus. — Rockhampton,  Thozet. 

Var.  latifolia.  Leaflets  more  obtuse  and  villous,  almost  connecting  the  species  with  G.  tomen- 
tosa.— Leptocyamus  latifolius,  Benth.  in  Mitch.  'Prop.  Austr.  361. — To  this  belong  several 
Queensland  specimens.  Where  the  pod  is  present  it  appears  to  be  always  longer  and  more 
slender  than  in  G.  tomentosa. 

4.  G.  sericea  (silky),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  245.  Stems  trailing  or  twining, 
the  whole  plant  hoary  or  white  with  a close  appressed  silky  pubescence, 
occasionally  mixed  on  the  calyx  only  with  rust-coloured  hairs.  Leaflets  3,  linear 
or  linear-lanceolate,  acute,  mostly  1 to  2in.  long,  the  terminal  one  at  a distance 
from  the  others.  Flowers  rather  larger  than  in  G.  tabacina,  but  otherwise  like 
them.  Pod  usually  above  lin.  long,  densely  silky-pubescent  with  appressed 
hairs.  Seeds  smooth. — Leptocyamus  sericeus,  F.  v.  M.  in  Hook.  Kew  Journ.  viii. 
45,  and  in  Trans.  Phil.  Inst.  Viet.  i.  40. 

Hab.:  Southern  inland  localities. 

5.  G.  tomentosa  (cottony),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  245.  Twining  or  prostrate, 
resembling  the  coarser  varieties  of  G.  tabacina,  but  always  more  tomentose- 
villous,  and  often  densely  and  softly  velvety-tomentose.  Leaflets  3,  ovate  or 
oblong,  very  obtuse,  1 to  2in.  long,  not  passing  into  the  lanceolate  acute  form  of 
the  upper  leaves  of  G.  tabacina.  Flowers  very  shortly  pedicellate  in  the  raceme 
as  in  that  species,  and  of  the  same  size,  but  usually  more  approximate  at  the  end 
of  the  peduncle.  Calyx  very  villous,  with  the  lobes  longer  than  the  tube.  Pod 
f to  fin.  long  or  rarely  more.  Flowers  in  the  lower  axils  solitary  or  clustered  as 
in  all  other  Australian  species  except  G.  falcata. — Leptolobium  tomentosum , Benth. 
in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  125. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander;  Broadsound,  R.  Brown;  Port  Curtis 
M'Gillivray ; Peak  Downs,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

We  have  the  same  species  from  the  Philippine  Islands  and  from  S.  China. — Benth. 


53.  HARDENBERGIA,  Benth. 

(After  the  Countess  of  Hardenberg.) 

Calyx-teeth  short,  the  2 upper  ones  more  or  less  united.  Standard  broadly 
orbicular,  emarginate,  without  indexed  auricles  ; wings  obovate-falcate,  adhering 
to  the  keel ; keel  obtuse,  shorter  and  usually  very  much  shorter  than  the  wings. 
Upper  stamen  quite  free,  the  others  united  in  a sheath ; anthers  reniform.  Ovary 
sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; style  short,  thick,  incurved,  attenuate  at  the  end, 
with  a terminal  stigma.  Pod  linear,  compressed  or  turgid.  Seeds  ovoid  or 
oblong,  laterally  attached  to  a short  funicle,  strophiolate. — Glabrous  twining 


Part  II.  H 


424 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[Hardenberyia. 


herbs  or  undershrubs.  Leaves  of  1,  3,  or  5 entire  stipellate  leaflets.  Stipules 
small,  striate.  Flowers  small,  violet,  white  or  pinkish,  with  a yellowish  or 
greenish  spot  on  the  standard,  in  axillary  racemes,  the  pedicels  usually  in  pairs 
or  small  clusters.  Bracts  small,  deciduous  or  rarely  persistent.  Bracteoles  none. 

A small  genus  limited  to  Australia  and  distinguished  from  Kennedya  by  the  short  calyx-teeth 
and  (except  the  doubtful  H.  retusa)  by  the  small  keel,  and  still  more  by  the  habit  and  numerous 
small  flowers  of  a very  different  colour,  giving  it  more  the  aspect  of  a Glycine  than  of  a true 
Kennedya.— Benth. 

Leaflets  cordate  ovate  lanceolate  or  linear,  solitary.  Keel  much  shorter 

than  the  wings.  Pod  flat,  with  dry  pulp  inside 1.  H.  monophylla. 

Leaflets  obovate,  truncate,  obcordate,  or  broadly  2-lobed.  Keel  rather 

shorter  than  the  wings 2.  H.  retusa. 

1.  XI.  monophylla  (one  leaflet),  Benth.  in  Huey.  Enum.  41,  and  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  246.  Leaflets  always  solitary,  usually  ovate  or  lanceolate,  2 to  3 or  even  4in. 
long,  obtuse  or  rather  acute,  often  coriaceous  and  strongly  reticulate,  but  varying 
from  broadly  cordate-ovate  to  narrow-lanceolate,  more  or  less  cordate  or  rounded 
at  the  base,  articulate  on  a petiole  of  J to  lin.  Flowers  usually  numerous,  about 
5 lines  long,  on  pedicels  rather  longer  than  the  calyx,  in  pairs  or  rarely  3 together, 
the  upper  racemes  often  forming  a terminal  panicle.  Calyx  about  1J  line  long. 
Pod  sessile,  flat,  attaining  about  If  in.,  coriaceous,  more  or  less  filled  between  the 
seeds  with  a pithy  pulp.  Seeds  very  oblique,  almost  transverse. — Maund, 
Botanist,  t.  84  ; Glycine  bimaculata,  Curt.  Bot.  Mag.  t.  263 ; Kennedya  mono- 
phylla, Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  106  ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  384  ; Bot.  Beg.  t.  1336  ; Lodd. 
Bot.  Cab.  t.  758;  K.  lotiyiracemosa,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1940;  K.  ovata,  Sims,  Bot. 
Mag.  t.  2169;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  384;  K.  cordata,  Lindl.  Bot.  Reg.  t.  944;  Harden- 
bergia  monophylla,  and  H.  ovota,  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  124  ; Hook.  f.  FI. 
Tasm.  ii.  361  ; H.  cordata,  Benth.  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  ii.  124. 

Hab.:  Common  in  southern  Queensland. 

Var.  ovata  (H.  ovata,  Benth.)  Differs  in  that  it  is  not  so  decided  a trailer,  but  often  forms  a 
compact  erect  shrub,  with  broadly  ovate-cordate  leaves. — Stanthorpe,  and  the  hills  about  that 
southern  locality. 

2.  H.  retusa  (leaflets  blunt  at  the  end),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  247. 
“ Kong- an,”  Cooktown,  “ Ru,”  Batavia  River,  Both.  A tall  twiner,  the  young 
shoots  and  inflorescence  silky-pubescent,  the  foliage  at  length  glabrous,  the 
branches  usually  angular.  Leaflets  3,  broadly  obovate-truncate,  obcordate  or 
broadly  and  obtusely  2-lobed,  the  midrib  usually  produced  into  a short  point,  If 
to  3in.  long,  somewhat  coriaceous,  rather  shining  above,  pale  underneath. 
Stipules  ovate  or  lanceolate,  striate,  reflexed.  Flowers  like  those  of  the  other 
species,  or  rather  larger  and  more  numerous,  usually  several  together  in  each 
cluster,  the  rhachis  of  the  cluster  sometimes  slightly  developed,  the  racemes  axil- 
lary or  in  terminal  panicles  as  in  the  other  species.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long, 
hoary-pubescent,  the  teeth  very  short  and  obtuse.  Standard  nearly  5 lines 
diameter,  broad  and  emarginate  ; wings  nearly  as  long,  falcate ; keel  rather 
shorter,  much  incurved,  obtuse.  Ovary  nearly  sessile,  with  about  10  ovules. 
Style  rather  thickened  and  indexed  at  the  base,  then  straight  and  slender,  with  a 
small  terminal  stigma.  Pod  broadly  linear,  flattened,  silky-villous,  about  2fin. 
long,  without  pithy  partitions  inside.  Seeds  strophiolate. — Dolichos  obcordatus, 
A.  Cunn.  Herb.;  Glycine  retusa,  Soland.  mss. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solancler,  A.  Cunningham ; Dunk  Island,  M‘Gillivray ; 
Albany  Island,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Cape  York,  W.  Hill. 

The  keel  is  rather  larger  than  in  the  other  species,  but  the  other  characters  and  habit  are 
quite  those  of  Hardenhergia. — Benth. 

Roots  roasted,  and  hammered  on  a stone  before  being  eaten. — Both, 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSflE. 


425 


54.  KENNEDYA,  Vent. 

(After  Mr.  Kennedy,  a London  nurseryman.) 

(Physolobium,  Hueg.;  Ziehya,  Hueg.;  Amphodus,  Lindl.) 

Calyx-lobes  about  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  in  an  emarginate 
or  2-toothed  upper  lip.  Standard  obovate  or  orbicular,  narrowed  into  a short 
claw,  with  minute  indexed  auricles  ; wings  falcate,  adhering  to  the  keel ; keel 
incurved,  obtuse  or  rather  acute.  Upper  stamen  free,  the  others  united  ; anthers 
uniform.  Ovary  nearly  sessile  or  shortly  stipitate,  with  several  ovules  ; style 
filiform,  rarely  toothed  at  the  top,  stigma  terminal.  Pod  linear,  flattened  cylin- 
drical or  turgid,  2-valved,  more  or  less  divided  by  a pithy  substance  between  the 
seeds.  Seeds  ovoid  or  oblong,  laterally  attached,  with  a very  prominent 
strophiole.  — Perennials,  with  prostrate  trailing  or  twining  stems,  usually 
pubescent  or  villous.  Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate  or  very  rarely  with  an 
additional  pair  or  reduced  to  1 ; leaflets  entire  or  obscurely  3-lobed,  with  stipellae. 
Stipules  persistent,  striate  or  veined.  Flowers  red  or  rarely  almost  black,  in 
racemes,  umbels,  pairs,  or  solitary  on  axillary  peduncles.  Bracts  either  stipule- 
like and  persistent,  or  small  and  very  deciduous.  Bracteoles  none.  Disk  round 
the  ovary  obscurely  annular  or  none  at  all. 

The  genus  is  entirely  Australian,  and,  with  Hardenbergia,  distinguished  amongst  PluiseolecB 
by  the  prominently  strophiolate  seeds. — Bentli. 


Standard  narrow-obovate.  Keel  almost  acute.  Pod  compressed.  Flowers 

above  lin.  long,  racemose,  red.  Wings  erect 1.  K.  rubicunda. 

Standard  broadly  obovate,  almost  orbicular.  Keel  obtuse.  Flowers  not  above 
fin.  long. 

Flowers  racemose.  Pedicels  very  short.  Bracts  very  small.  (Pod 

unknown) 2 K.  procurrens. 

Peduncles  1 or  2-flowered.  Pedicels  long.  Bracts  stipule-like,  persistent. 

Pod  cylindrical,  coriaceous 3 . K.  prostrata. 

Very  tall  climber,  pubescent.  Leaflets  2 to  5in.  diameter.  Standard  obovate, 
fin.  long,  the  free  stamen  sometimes  if  not  always  connate  with  the  others 
for  some  distance  up 4 . K.  exaltata. 


1.  IL  rubicunda  (flowers  red),  Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  104;  Benth.  FI.  Anstr. 
ii.  249.  A large  twining  species,  pubescent  or  villous.  Leaflets  3,  usually  ovate 
and  3 to  4in.  long,  but  varying  from  broadly  rhomboid  obovate  or  almost 
orbicular  to  ovate-lanceolate  or  lanceolate  and  acute,  the  smaller  ones  often  under 
2in.  and  when  very  luxuriant  attaining  5 or  Bin.,  rarely  nearly  glabrous,  some- 
times softly-silky  on  both  sides.  Stipules  small,  striate,  reflexed.  Flowers  of  a dull 
or  dark  red,  1J  to  1-Jin.  long,  in  pedunculate  racemes  rarely  exceeding  the  leaves. 
Pedicels  usually  in  pairs,  rather  longer  than  the  calyx.  Bracts  small,  very 
deciduous.  Calyx  silky-villous,  5 to  6 lines  long.  Standard  narrow-obovate, 
abruptly  reflexed  from  about  the  middle ; wings  narrow,  erect,  adhering  to  the 
keel  above  the  middle  ; keel  narrow,  as  long  as  the  wings,  rather  acute.  Pod  flat 
or  the  valves  slightly  convex,  2 to  4in.  long,  usually  villous.  Seeds  oblong, 
almost  transverse,  laterally  attached  to  a funicle  protruding  far  into  the  cavity. — 
DC.  Prod.  ii.  383  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  954  ; Glycine  rubicunda , Curt.  Bot.  Mag. 
t.  268;  Amphodus  ovatus,  Lindl.  Bot.  Reg.  t.  1101;  Kennedya  phaseoli/olia, 
Hoffm.  from  the  descr.  in  Linmea,  xvi.  Litt.  Ber.  281. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  Fraser,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others  ; Wide  Bay,  Bidwill ; Ipswich,  Nernst. 
Common  in  south  Queensland,  and  from  thence  to  Rockingham  Bay. 

2.  K.  procurrens  (running),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  365  and  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  249.  Stems  prostrate,  pubescent  or  villous.  Leaflets  3,  ovate  or 
elliptical,  obtuse  or  mucronate,  1 to  2in.  long,  rugose,  slightly  pubescent  above, 
more  so  underneath.  Stipules  broadly  lanceolate,  reflexed.  Flowers  rather 
above  Jin.  long,  in  a short  raceme  at  the  end  of  a rather  long  peduncle,  Bracts 


426 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSrE. 


[Kennedy  a. 


small.  Pedicels  short.  Calyx  about  2f  lines  long,  the  lobes  shorter  than  the 
tube.  Standard  broadly  obovate,  emarginate  ; keel  rather  narrow,  obtuse  ; wings 
narrower  and  scarcely  so  long.  Pod  not  seen. 

Hab.:  Mount  Kennedy,  on  the  Maranoa,  Mitchell. 

Only  a single  specimen  seen,  unless  one  without  flowers  from  Keppel  Bay,  R.  Brown,  belongs 
to  the  same  species. — Benth. 

3.  E.  prostrata  (prostrate),  R.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew  ed.  2,  iv.  299  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  250.  Stems  prostrate  or  sometimes  twining  in  the  large  variety, 
pubescent  or  hirsute.  Leaflets  3,  broadly  obovate  or  orbicular,  under  lin.  long  in 
the  ordinary  variety,  often  undulate,  pubescent  or  hirsute.  Stipules  leafy,  broadly 
cordate,  acute,  or  acuminate,  free  or  united.  Peduncles  1 or  2-flowered,  rarely 
with  2 pairs  of  flowers.  Pedicels  usually  longer  than  the  calyx,  with  stipule-like 
bracts  at  the  base.  Flowers  scarlet,  nearly  fin.  long.  Calyx  pubescent,  about  4 
lines  long.  Standard  obovate  ; keel  incurved,  obtuse  ; wings  much  narrower  and 
rather  shorter,  adhering  only  near  the  base.  Pod  nearly  cylindrical,  very 
coriaceous,  pubescent,  If  to  2in.  long.  Seeds  attached  by  a very  short  funicle. — 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  101  ; Glycine  coccinea,  Curt.  Bot.  Mag.  t.  270. 

Hab.:  Inland,  south-west  Queensland. 

4.  K.  ? exaltata  (a  tall  climber),  Bail.  Ql.  Agri.  Journ.,  July  1897, 
and  Oct.  1899.  A robust  pubescent  climber,  according  to  Mr.  E.  Cowley,  attain- 
ing to  the  tops  of  tall  trees.  Stems  hairy  Stipules  oblong-lanceolate,  7 or  8 
lines  long,  including  the  portion  (about  3 lines)  produced  below  the  insertion, 
clothed  with  appressed  hairs  ; stipellte  very  narrow  and  the  lower  ones  rather  long. 
Petioles  about  4 or  5in.,  petiolules  from  1 to  lfin.  long.  Leaflets  3,  somewhat 
orbicular  in  outline,  2 to  5in.  diameter,  the  lateral  ones  2,  the  terminal  usually 
broadly  3-lobed,  the  midrib  of  each  lobe  ending  in  a bristle-like  point,  pale  on  the 
under  surface.  Racemes  axillary  ; peduncle  somewhat  flattened,  about  3in.  long, 
bearing  about  the  centre  a hairy  lanceolate  bract ; raceme  or  portion  bearing  the 
flowers  about  as  long  as  the  peduncle.  Flowers  solitary  or  in  pairs  (violet- 
coloured  and  very  attractive,  E.  Cowley).  Pedicels  about  2f  lines  long,  curved, 
hairy.  Calyx-tube  gibbous,  very  hairy  outside  and  slightly  so  inside,  long  as  the 
pedicel ; the  2 upper  lobes  united  to  the  end,  3f  lines  long  ; lateral  ones  about  the 
same  length,  but  more  acute  ; the  lower  or  keel  lobe  about  6 lines  long,  somewhat 
acute.  Standard  obovate,  about  fin.  long,  with  2 auricles  at  the  base  of  the 
lamina  ; claw  short,  the  wing  and  keel  petals  about  as  long  as  the  standard,  all 
obtuse.  The  free  stamen  sometimes,  if  not  always,  connate  for  some  distance 
up  with  the  others.  Ovary  stipitate,  hairy ; upper  portion  of  the  style  glabrous. 
Stigma  terminal.  Pod  straight,  4in.  long,  fin.  broad,  convex  on  both  sides,  silky 
outside,  glabrous  inside  with  transverse  partitions  slightly  constricted  between  the 
seeds  ; seeds  6 or  7 in  each  pod,  almost  lens-formed,  about  4 lines  diameter, 
light-brown,  stropliiole  not  large. 

Hab.:  Scrubs  of  the  Barron  Biver,  E.  Cowley,  1897 ; pod  specimens,  Atherton,  J.  F. 

Bailey,  1899. 

The  flowers  upon  the  specimens  received  being  all  more  or  less  injured  by  insects,  the 
peculiarity  noticed  in  the  stipules  and  stamens  may,  when  better  known,  cause  this  plant  to  be 
removed  out  of  the  genus  in  which  I now  place  it ; but  with  the  material  to  hand  I can  do 
nothing  better  with  it. 


55.  ERYTHRINA,  Linn. 

(Flowers  red.) 

Calyx  campanulate  or  cylindrical,  obliquely  truncate  or  slit  on  the  upper  side, 
entire  or  toothed.  Standard  broad  or  long,  erect  or  recurved,  narrowed  at  the 
base,  without  appendages  ; wings  short,  often  minute  or  none;  keel  short,  the 
petals  united  or  free.  Stamens  all  united  at  the  base,  the  upper  one  often  free 


Eryihrina .]  XLIII.  LEGUMINOS.E.  427 

from  the  middle  ; anthers  reniform.  Ovary  stipitate,  with  several  ovules ; style 
subulate,  oblique  at  the  end,  with  a small  stigma.  Pod  stipitate,  linear-falcate, 
acuminate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  more  or  less  contracted  between  the  seeds, 
2-valved,  usually  pithy  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  distant,  ovoid  or  oblong,  wjfth  a 
lateral  oblong  hilum,  not  stropliiolate. — Erect  trees  or  shrubs,  rarely  tall  herbs, 
the  trunk,  branches,  and  often  the  petioles  armed  wTith  conical  prickles.  Leaflets 
3,  usually  broad,  entire  or  3-lobed,  the  stipellae  usually  gland-like.  Stipules 

small.  Racemes  axillary,  or,  if  terminal,  leafy  at  the  base.  Flowers  large, 
usually  red,  in  clusters  of  2 or  3 on  lateral  nodes  along  the  peduncle.  Bracts 
small  or  none. 

The  genus  is  widely  dispersed  over  tropical  America,  Africa,  and  Asia,  extending  into  N. 
America  and  S.  Africa.  Of  the  4 Queensland  species,  one  is  a common  Asiatic  one,  the  others 
are  endemic.  The  genus  is  a very  natural  one  and  well  characterised ; some  botanists  have, 
however,  proposed  to  break  it  up  into  three  or  four,  founded  on  diversities  in  the  form  of  the 
calyx  and  proportions  of  the  petals,  which  appear  to  vary  so  much  from  species  to  species  as 
scarcely  to  serve  even  as  sectional  characters. — Benth.  (in  part). 

Stem  and  branches  prickly. 

Leaflets  broadly  2 or  3-lobed.  Calyx  about  Jin.  long.  Standard  scarcely 


clawed 1 . E.  vespertilio. 

Leaflets  entire.  Calyx  about  Jin.  long.  Standard  narrowed  into  a short 

claw 2.  E.  indica. 

Stems  without  prickles  and  seldom  any  on  the  branches  or  branchlets, 

slightly  velvety.  Leaflets  entire.  Pod  5 or  Gin.  long  ; seeds  subovate  . 3.  E.  insularis. 

Stems  prickly.  Leaflets  entire,  terminal  one  7in.  long,  8in.  broad.  Pod  1 

or  2-seeded,  3 to  5in.  long,  lin.  broad  over  the  seeds,  prominently  veined  . 4.  E.  phlebocarpa . 


1.  El.  vespertilio  (bat-winged  leaflets),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  218, 

and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  253.  “ Goomurrie,”  Nanango,  Shirley;  “ Aranyi,”  Batavia 

River,  Roth.  Usually  a small  tree,  glabrous,  the  branches  prickly,  but 
not  the  leaves.  Leaflets  broadly  cuneate  at  the  base,  spreading  to  3 or 
4in.  in  breadth,  often  but  not  always  broader  than  long,  usually  3-lobed, 
the  lateral  lobes  spreading  or  recurved,  obtuse,  sometimes  broader  than 
long,  sometimes  much  longer  than  broad,  the  middle  one  triangular  or 
lanceolate,  usually  acute,  broad  or  narrow,  either  longer  than  the  lateral  ones 
or  more  frequently  much  smaller  or  disappearing  altogether,  in  which  case  the 
leaf  is  divided  into  2 long  narrow  diverging  or  divaricate  lobes.  Flowers 
numerous,  pendulous,  in  showy  erect  racemes.  Calyx  about  fin.  long,  broad, 
entire  or  obscurely  toothed,  obliquely  truncate  and  slit  on  the  upper  side.  Standard 
ovate,  erect  at  the  base,  recurved  upwards,  nearly  1-Jin.  long,  narrowed  but 
scarcely  clawed  at  the  base ; wings  obliquely  oblong,  about  4 lines  long ; keel- 
petals  like  the  wings,  but  about  6 lines  long,  free.  Style  hooked  at  the  end.  Pod 
elongated,  torulose,  with  few  large  red  seeds. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown  ; Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander  ; Bay  of  Inlets, 
R.  Brown;  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  Fraser , F.v.  Mueller,  &c.;  Cape  York,  M'Gillivray ; 
Port  Denison,  Fitzulan ; in  the  interior,  on  the  Maranoa,  &c.,  Mitchell ; found  during  the  whole 
of  Leichhardt's  expedition  (Herb.  Mus.  Par.) 

The  Brisbane  River  specimens  have  usually  large  leaflets  with  broad  short  lobes,  those  from 
north-west  ( E . hiloba,  F.  v.  M.  in  Hook.  Kew  Journ.  ix.  21),  have  2 narrow  lobes  with  or  without 
a small  intermediate  one,  the  others  show  every  gradation  from  the  one  form  to  the  other.  — 
Benth. 

Roots  eaten  raw.  Flowers  stuck  in  front  of  the  hair  with  beeswax  as  a sign  of 
mourning. — Roth. 

Wood  of  a straw  colour,  soft  and  light. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  117. 

2.  E.  indica  (Indian),  Lam.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  412  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  253. 
Mochi-wood  of  Madras.  A very  large  tree  in  the  tropics,  usually  much  smaller 
in  the  south,  glabrous,  the  branches  but  not  the  leaves  armed  with  prickies  usually 
black.  Leaflets  entire,  very  broadly  ovate,  often  6 to  8in.  long,  the  terminal  one 
rhomboidal,  the  lateral  ones  rather  oblique.  Flowers  scarlet,  nearly  2in.  long,  in 
dense  racemes.  Calyx  broad,  fully  fin.  long,  entire  or  slightly  toothed,  obliquely 
truncate  and  slit  on  the  upper  side.  Standard  ovate,  scarcely  recurved,  narrowed 


428 


XLII1.  LEGUMINOSflE. 


[ Erythrina . 


into  a distinct  stipes.  Wings  and  keel  nearly  similar,  all  free,  obovate,  and  about 
Jin.  long.  Pod  much  contracted  between  the  seeds,  often  attaining  9in.  to  1ft. 
Seeds  few,  large,  red,  distant. — Wight,  Ic.  t.  58. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  N.  coast,  B.  Brown ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan;  Tallegalla,  J.  Marquis.  In 
flower  November. 

Common  in  East  India  and  the  Archipelago,  and  often  planted  for  shade  or  ornament.— Benth. 

Wood  of  a straw  colour,  very  light  and  soft ; does  not  seem  to  be  much  attacked  by  insects. — 
Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  118. 

8.  E.  insularis  (an  island  tree),  Bail.  Ql.  Agri.  Journ.  i.,  pt.  3.  A spreading- 
headed tree  about  15  to  20ft.  high,  bark  light-coloured,  smooth,  the  trunk  and 
branches  unevenly  round,  giving  the  idea  of  a hard-wooded  tree;  the  ends  of  the 
branches  or  branchlets  slightly  velvety  as  well  as  the  foliage,  but  being  late  in  the 
season  most  of  the  leaves  had  fallen  at  the  time  my  specimens  were  obtained  ; 
I could  not  find  a single  prickle  upon  the  tree  from  which  the  seeds  were  obtained, 
but  another  tree,  upon  which  some  few  leaves  still  remained,  had  a few  pairs 
of  minute  mahogany-coloured  ones.  Leaves  smaller  but  very  similar  to  E.  indica, 
or  between  that  species  and  E.  vespertilio.  No  flowers  seen.  Fruiting  raceme 

3 or  4in.  long,  upon  a peduncle  of  about  6in.,  pods  crowded,  pedicels  lin. 
long,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together.  Pods  seldom  exceeding  5 or  6in.,  abruptly 
terminating  in  a prominent  recurved  point,  at  the  base  a more  or  less  portion  is 
seedless  and  much  narrowed,  the  rest  of  the  pod  almost  moniliform,  the  contrac- 
tions between  the  seeds  very  irregular,  often  long  and  narrow.  Seeds  red, 
subovate,  about  5 lines  long,  persistent  after  the  opening  of  the  pods. 

Hab.:  Turtle  Island,  June,  1897. 

4.  E.  phlebocarpa  (pods  veined),  Bail.  Ql.  Agri.  Journ.  i.,  pt.  5.  Deciduous 
tree;  branchlets  thick  and  more  or  less  covered  with  small  black  prickles.  Petioles 
nearly  terete,  about  8in.  long,  unarmed.  Leaflets  3,  membranous,  the  terminal 
one  often  Tin.  long  and  8in.  broad,  on  a petiolule  of  about  Jin.  at  the  end  of  a 
rhachis  of  about  2 Jin.,  rhomboidal  in  form  ; the  lateral  leaflets  smaller  but  very 
similar  in  form,  on  petiolules  of  about  Jin.  Stipellfe  gland-like.  Peduncles 
terminal,  stout,  unarmed  or  a minute  prickle  or  two  near  the  base,  5 or  6in.  long, 
or  with  the  raceme  sometimes  15in.  Flowers  crowded,  red,  usually  in  whorls  of 

4 upon  the  rhachis,  the  whorls  scarcely  Jin.  apart.  Pedicels  4 lines  long.  Calyx 
campanulate,  oblique  at  the  top,  about  6 lines  long,  marked  with  longitudinal 
lines.  Standard  2in.  long,  slightly  recurved,  tapering  towards  the  base,  about  7 
or  8 lines  broad  when  expanded,  but  usually  infolded  and  so  appearing  narrower, 
apex  acuminate  : wings  and  keel  petals  oblique-oblong,  about  as  long  as  the  calyx. 
Pod  1 or  2-seeded,  3 to  5in.  long,  about  lin.  broad  over  the  seeds,  much  con- 
stricted between  them,  with  a long  seedless  base  and  long  acuminate  apex  ; the 
exocarp  marked  on  the  outside  by  strong  reticulate  veins,  endocarp  separating 
from  the  exocarp  and  long  retaining  the  seeds.  Seeds  oblong,  red,  7 lines  long, 
4 lines  broad,  flat  on  the  bottom  or  hilum  side,  and  showing  a rather  sharp 
longitudinal  ridge  on  the  upper  side.  Allied  to  E.  indica,  Linn. 

Hab.:  Newcastle  Bay,  Cape  York  Peninsula,  Frank  L.  Jardine. 

56.  STRONGYLODON,  Vogel. 

(Referring  to  rounded  teeth  of  calyx.) 

Calyx  campanulate,  gibbous  ; teeth  short,  obtuse,  imbricate.  Corolla  much 
exserted.  Standard  lanceolate,  recurved ; wings  obtuse,  more  than  a third  as 
long  ; keel  curved,  as  long  as  the  standard,  narrowed  into  a beak.  Stamens 
diadelphous ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  stalked,  ovules  few.  Style  filiform, 
beardless,  stigma  capitate.  Pod  oblong,  turgid.  Seeds  with  a hilum  running 
more  than  half  round. — Twining  herbs,  with  the  habit  of  Phaseolus,  with 
stipellate  3-foliolate  leaves.  Flowers  in  long  lax  racemes. 


Strongylodon .] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS/E. 


429 


1.  S.  ruber  (red),  Vogel;  A.  Gray  Bot.  Amer.  Expl.  Exped.  446,  t.  48; 
Baker,  in  Hook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  191.  Stems  firm,  wide-twining,  glabrous. 
Leaflets  green,  subconcolorous,  glabrous,  membranous,  the  end  one  roundish 
with  a point,  4 to  Gin.  long.  Racemes  copious,  axillary,  distinctly  pedunculate, 
6 to  12in.  long ; pedicels  geminate  from  the  tumid  nodes,  filiform,  drooping, 
% to  lin.  Calyx  glabrous,  3 to  4 lines,  clasped  at  the  base  by  a pair  of  short 
round  deciduous  bracteoles.  Corolla  bright  red,  3 or  4 times  the  calyx.  Pod 
oblong,  3in.  long,  distinctly  stalked,  2-seeded. — Rhynchosia  lucida,  DC.  Prod.  ii. 
387 ; Baker  l.c. 

Hab.:  Coastal  scrubs  of  tropical  Queensland,  F.  v.  M. 


57.  MUCUNA,  Adans. 

(Brazilian  name.) 

Calyx  broadly  campanulate,  4-toothed,  the  upper  one  (consisting  of  2 com- 
bined) broader,  the  lowest  longer.  Standard  shorter  than  the  wings  ; keel  as 
long  as  or  longer  than  the  wings,  incurved  at  the  end,  with  a hardened  point  or 
beak.  Upper  stamen  free,  the  others  united  ; filaments  usually  dilated  upwards  ; 
anthers  alternately  longer  and  erect,  and  shorter  versatile  and  often  bearded. 
Ovary  sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; style  filiform,  with  a terminal  stigma.  Pod 
thick,  clothed  with  stinging  often  very  deciduous  hairs,  2-valved.  Seeds  roundish 
with  a long  linear  hilum,  or  oblong  with  a shorter  lateral  hilum.— Large  twiners. 
Leaflets  3,  stipellate.  Stipules  small  or  none.  Fkwers  usually  large,  purple 
yellow  or  nearly  white,  in  axillary  racemes,  the  pedicels  clustered  along  the 
rhachis  on  lateral  nodes,  or  on  short  peduncles,  when  the  raceme  is  converted  into 
a corymb  or  dense  panicle. 

The  genus  is  widely  spread  over  the  tropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World ; the  only 
Australian  species  is  a common  Asiatic  one.  With  considerable  diversity  in  the  pod  and  seeds, 
the  species  are  all  distinguished  by  the  keel  and  stamens.  The  pungent  hairs  of  the  pod  are 
rarely  wanting,  and  all  become  black  in  drying. — Benth. 

1.  M.  gigantea  (gigantic),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  405  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  254. 
Glabrous  or  slightly  hairy  when  young.  Leaflets  from  broadly  ovate  to  ovate- 
lanceolate,  acuminate,  3 to  4in.  long,  the  lateral  ones  very  oblique.  Flowers  of 
a pale  greenish-yellow,  nearly  ljin.  long,  in  short  loose  corymbs,  on  pendulous 
peduncles  of  from  2 or  3in.  to  nearly  1ft.  Calyx  about  -|in.  broad,  hirsute  with 
deciduous  hairs.  Standard  ovate,  concave,  reflexed  ; wings  rather  longer,  the 
edges  pubescent  below  the  middle  ; keel  still  longer,  with  a short  indurated 
inflexed  beak.  Shorter  anthers  bearded.  Pod  rather  thick  but  flat,  above  lin. 
broad,  with  a narrow  longitudinal  wing  on  each  side  of  each  suture,  the  pungent 
hairs  usually  falling  off  before  maturity.  Seeds  2 to  about  6,  large,  orbicular, 
half  encircled  by  the  hilum.— W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  254  ; Hook.  Bot.  Misc.  iii.  t. 
Suppl.  14  (wrong  as  to  colour  ?). 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River  and  Moreton  Bay,  Fraser,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others;  Rockhampton, 
Thozet;  Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallacliy. 

The  species  is  widely  distributed  over  E.  India,  the  Archipelago,  and  islands  of  the  S. 
Pacific. — Benth. 


58.  GALACTIA,  R.  Br. 

(Some  species  milky.) 

Calyx-lobes  4 (the  upper  one  consisting  of  2 combined)  acuminate,  the  2 lateral 
shorter.  Standard  ovate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  the  margins  slightly  inflexed ; 
wings  narrow,  slightly  adhering  to  the  keel ; keel  about  as  long.  Upper  stamen 
free,  the  others  united  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  nearly  sessile  ; style  filiform, 
with  a small  terminal  stigma.  Pod  linear,  straight  or  curved,  usually  flat, 


430 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Galactia' 


2-valved,  with  a pithy  pulp  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  not  slrophiolate.- — Prostrate 
or  twining  herbs.  Leaflets  8 or  rarely  1 or  5,  stipellate.  Flowers  in  axillary 
racemes,  clustered  along  the  common  peduncle.  Bracts  small,  setaceous, 
deciduous.  Bracteoles  very  small. 

The  species  are  chiefly  American,  one  of  them  widely  spread  over  the  warmer  regions  of  both 
the  New  and  the  Old  World,  two  or  three  others  are  African  or  Asiatic.  Of  the  three  Queensland 
species,  one  is  the  common  cosmopolitan  one,  the  others  are  endemic.  The  genus  is  readily 
distinguished  by  the  acuminate  calyx  with  the  upper  lobe  always  quite  entire. — Bentli. 

Glabrous  or  pubescent  with  spreading  hairs.  Flowers  few  in  the  raceme,  under 


Jin.  long 1.  G.  tenui flora. 

Silky-pubescent  or  villous.  Flowers  numerous,  7 or  8 lines  long 2.  G.  Muelleri. 

Root  fusiform.  Plant  glabrous,  shortly  trailing.  Flowers  few 3.  G.  various. 


1.  G.  tenuiflora  (flowers  slender),  Willd.;  Wight  and  Am.  Prod.  206  ; Bentli. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  255.  Stems  from  a thick  rhizome,  usually  slender,  twining, 
attaining  several  feet,  glabrous  or  pubescent  with  spreading  or  reflexed  hairs. 
Leaflets  3,  ovate  or  oblong,  usually  1 to  2in.  long  and  obtuse,  but  variable  in 
shape  and  size,  glabrous  or  pubescent,  especially  underneath.  Peduncles  rarely 
exceeding  6in.,  with  few  distant  clusters  of  2 or  3 flowers  each,  on  a small  gland- 
like node.  Pedicels  very  short.  Flowers  pale  reddish -purple  or  nearly  white, 
varying  from  4 to  6 lines.  Calyx-lobes  narrow,  longer  than  the  tube.  Pod  1 to 
2in.  long,  linear,  flat,  coriaceous,  with  thickened  margins,  glabrous  or  pubescent. 
Seeds  obliquely  attached,  smooth. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria  and  adjoining  coast , It.  Brown,  Henne,  Landsborough  ; 
Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander ; Keppel  Bay,  Ii.  Brown ; Port  Curtis  and  Keppel  Island, 
M'Gillivray ; Brisbane  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Broadsound,  Bowman. 

The  species  is  common  in  tropical  Asia,  Africa,  and  America,  and  varies  much  in  the  breadth 
of  the  leaflets  from  almost  orbicular  to  linear,  in  the  indumentum,  and  in  the  size  of  the  flowers. 
This  has  given  rise  to  very  numerous  synonyms,  of  which  nineteen  are  quoted  in  Mart.  FI.  Bras. 
Papil.  143.  The  Australian  specimens  have  usually  larger  flowers  and  the  pod  straighter  than 
in  most  of  those  from  other  countries,  but  some  are  precisely  like  the  Indian  ones. — Benth. 

2.  G.  IVIuelleri  (after  Baron  von  Mueller),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  255.  A 
larger  and  much  stouter  plant  than  G.  tenuiflora,  the  branches  softly  tomentose. 
Leaflets  oval-oblong  and  very  obtuse  or  elliptical,  1^  to  2Jin.  long,  firm,  softly 
silky-pubescent  on  both  sides.  Peduncles  long,  rigid,  bearing  numerous  flowers, 
considerably  larger  than  in  G.  tenuiflora,  in  distinct  or  distant  clusters.  Calyx 
silky,  nearly  5 lines  long.  Standard  7 to  8 lines  long.  Pod  silky,  about  2in. 
long,  straight. 

Hab.:  Walsh  River,  T.  Barclay -Millar. 

3.  G.  varians  (leaves  various),  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  x.  “ Morni-li-an,”  More- 
head  River,  Both.  Stems  trailing  from  a thick  fusiform  rootstock,  glabrous,  and 
more  or  less  angular.  Leaves  very  variable  in  form  and  size,  often  near  the  base 
reduced  to  a single  oblong  leaflet,  under  lin.  long,  the  larger  leaves  bearing  as 
many  as  12  leaflets,  alternate  or  opposite  upon  the  rhachis,  nearly  sessile,  or  an 
odd  lower  one  upon  the  same  leaf,  with  a petiolule  |ln.  long,  oblong,  1 to  2in. 
long,  the  largest  nearly  fin.  broad,  very  obtuse  at  both  ends  and  prominently 
reticulate,  pale  on  the  under  surface.  Peduncles  terminal,  nearly  1ft.  long, 
flower  upon  the  upper  half,  distant,  singly,  on  slender  pedicels  of  about  3 lines. 
Flowers,  only  a few  at  the  end  of  the  raceme  upon  the  specimen  examined,  seem 
to  be  pale-coloured,  somewhat  stained  with  purple,  softly  hairy  on  the  outside  of 
the  petals.  Standard  nearly  orbicular,  5 lines  in  diameter.  Calyx  slightly  hairy, 
the  two  upper  lobes  combined,  the  three  others  very  narrow,  the  middle  one  much 
longer  than  the  others.  Pod  2in.  long,  straight,  not  flattened,  nearly  terete. 
Seeds  about  7,  smooth,  of  a grey  colour  and  elegantly  reticulate. 

Hab.:  Coolgarra,  Matthew  Butler,  J.P.,  who,  with  the  specimens,  sends  the  following 
marvellous  statement  about  its  medicinal  properties  : — “ On  the  24th  December  last  I was  sent 
for  to  make  the  will  of  an  old  man  who  was,  as  he  thought,  dying  of  rheumatism.  ...  In  a 


— 


PL.  X/V 


GaLcuXixc  veer  Larrs,  Bail-. 


GovfZifkc.  Office 

Brisbane*  0. 


F.  C Wills 


Galactia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


431 


fit  of  abstraction  he  pulled  up  the  root  and  ate  it.  Fancying  it  gave  him  relief,  he  pulled  more, 
boiled  it,  and  drank  the. liquor.  Within  a week  there  was  a marked  change  in  him,  and  now 
(17th  March)  he  is  quite  well  and  looks  ten  years  younger.  ...  A miner,  who  has  been 
suffering  for  over  two  years  from  a scrofulous  affection,  took  a decoction  of  this  root  for  a fort- 
night, and  his  skin  seems  now  perfectly  clear,  and  he  tells  me  he  feels  a new  man.  ...  I 
had  a slight  touch  of  rheumatism  in  the  leg,  and  tried  a decoction  of  the  root,  with  the  result 
that  the  pain  has  gone  and  the  stiffness  is  wearing  away.” 

Used  for  poisoning  water  for  fish,  Roth. 

Dr.  Joseph  Lauterer  says  that  the  sticky  yellow  resin  of  the  roots  might  be  recommended  in 
rheumatism,  skin  diseases,  scrofulosis,  syphilis,  and  in  some  of  these  it  might  surpass  guaiacum 
in  quickness  and  certainty  of  effect. 


59.  CAN AVALIA,  DC. 

(Malabar  name  of  a species.) 

Calyx  2 upper  lobes  united  into  a large  obtuse  entire  or  2-lobed  upper  lip,  3 
lower  ones  into  a much  smaller  entire  or  3-lobed  lower  lip.  Standard  broad, 
reflexed,  with  2 callosities  inside  above  the  claw  ; wings  oblong  or  linear,  falcate 
or  twisted,  free  ; keel  incurved  and  sometimes  rostrate.  Stamens  all  united  in  a 
tube,  open  at  the  very  base,  where  the  upper  one  is  free ; anthers  uniform. 
Ovary  shortly  stipitate,  with  several  ovules  ; style  filiform  or  slightly  thickened, 
with  a terminal  stigma.  Pod  oblong  or  linear,  broad,  2-valved,  with  a prominent 
longitudinal  rib  or  wing  on  each  side  of  the  upper  suture.  Seeds  rounded  or 
oblong,  with  a linear  hilum,  varying  in  length.— Large  herbs  with  twining  or 
trailing  stems.  Leaflets  3,  usually  large,  stipulate.  Stipules  minute,  often 
gland-like  or  none.  Flowers  rather  large,  purplish  pink  or  white,  in  axillary 
racemes ; pedicels  very  short,  clustered  on  lateral  nodes  along  the  upper  portion 
of  the  rhachis.  Bracts  minute.  Bracteoles  small,  orbicular,  very  deciduous. 

The  species  are  widely  distributed  over  the  tropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World, 
some  of  them  cultivated  in  India  for  food,  although  others  are  very  poisonous.  The  Australian 
one  is  a common  maritime  plant.  The  genus  is  readily  known  by  the  calyx,  different  from  all 
except  some  species  of  Plinscolus,  which  have  a very  different  keel,  stigma,  and  pod. — Bentli. 

1.  C.  obtusifolia  (leaflets  obtuse),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  404  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
256.  Glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  silky-pubescent  (in  the  variety  densely  silky- 
tomentose),  the  stems  more  frequently  prostrate  or  trailing  than  twining.  Leaflets 
broadly  obovate  or  orbicular,  very  obtuse  or  retuse,  2 to  Sin.  long  and  rather 
thick,  rarely  thinner,  attaining  4 or  Sin.  and  obscurely  acuminate.  Flowers  pink 
or  nearly  white,  along  the  upper  portion  of  stout  erect  peduncles,  varying  from 
6in.  to  1ft.  in  length.  Calyx  nearly  |in.  long,  the  upper  lip  nearly  as  long  as  the 
tube,  with  2 very  broad  rounded  lobes,  the  lower  nearly  half  as  long  with  3 small 
lobes.  Standard  orbicular,  fin.  diameter  ; keel  much  curved,  but  obtuse.  Pod  f 
to  lin.  broad,  the  longitudinal  ones  very  narrow.  Seeds  2 to  8,  the  hilum  oblong 
or  shortly  linear,  not  half  the  length  of  the  seed. — Benth.  in  Mart.  FI.  Bras.  Pap. 
178,  t.  48,  where  the  numerous  synonyms  are  quoted. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown  ; Endeavour  River,  Bustard  Bay,  Bay  of 
Inlets,  &c.,  Banks  and.  Solander,  R.  Brown;  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Ipswich,  Nernst; 
Broadsound  and  Fitzroy  River,  Bowman. 

The  species  is  common  on  the  sea-coasts  of  S.  America,  Africa,  and  tropical  Asia. 

Var.  sericea.  Leaflets  oval-rotund,  rather  thick,  about  2in.  long,  1 Jin.  broad  ; lateral  nerves 
4 or  5 on  each  side  of  costule,  upper  side  sparsely,  under  side  densely  silky-tomentose.  Peduncles 
rather  shorter  and  flowers  darker  than  in  the  normal  form.  Pod  4in.  long,  lin.  broad,  straight ; 
valves  hard.  Seeds  about  4,  light-brown.  Hab.:  Bustard  Head,  Jas.  Keys. 

Some  botanists  consider  that  this  may  be  the  wild  state  of  C.  ensiformis,  which  is  probable  ; 
the  pods  of  the  Queensland  species  vary  considerably  in  length  and  width. 

2.  : C.  ensiformis  (sword-shaped),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  404  ; Baker  in  FI.  Prop. 
Afr.  ii.  190.  Stems  widely  climbing,  subglabrous.  Stipules  minute,  deciduous. 
Petiole  2 to  Gin.  long.  Leaflets  3 ; central  one  ovate  or  oblong,  3 to  Gin.  long  ; 
lateral  ones  smaller,  unequal-sided,  membranous,  glabrescent.  Flowers  numerous, 


432 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Canavalia . 


in  moderately  dense  racemes  on  flexuose  peduncles  Gin.  or  more  long.  Calyx  £in. 
deep,  the  bifid  upper  lip  a-third  as  long  as  the  tube.  Corolla  pinkish  or  white, 
fragrant,  twice  the  calyx  or  more.  Pod  short-stalked,  4 to  8 or  12in.  long,  15  to 
18  lines  broad,  glabrescent,  the  prominent  ribs  \\  to  2 lines  from  the  upper 
suture.  Seeds  red  or  white. — C.  gladiata , DC.  1 . c . ; C.  polystachya,  Schweinf.; 
Dolichos  yladiatus,  Jacq.;  Canavalia  incurva,  DC.  l.c. 

Hab.:  This  African  and  East  Indian  bean  has  been  met  with  as  a stray  from  cultivation. 

60.  PHASEOLUS,  Linn. 

(Pods  boat-shaped.) 

Calyx  2 upper  lobes  or  teeth  united  in  a short  entire  or  2-lobed  upper  lip,  the 
lowest  one  longer  and  narrow.  Standard  broad,  recurved,  often  oblique  or 
twisted  ; wings  obliquely  obovate  or  oblong,  adhering  to  the  keel ; keel  produced 
into  a long  linear  beak,  more  or  less  spirally  twisted.  Upper  stamen  free,  the 
others  united  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  nearly  sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; 
style  thickened  within  the  beak  of  the  keel  and  twisted  with  it,  more  or  less 
bearded  upwards  along  the  inner  side ; stigma  oblique  or  on  the  inner  side  of  the 
style.  Pod  linear  or  falcate,  flat  or  terete,  2-valved.  Seeds  with  a small  or 
shortly  linear  hilum,  not  strophiolate. — Herbs  either  annual  or  perennial  and 
woody  at  the  base,  short  and  erect  or  elongated  and  twining  in  the  same  species. 
Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate  or  very  rarely  1-foliolate,  stipellate,  the  leaflets  entire 
or  lobed.  Stipules  usually  persistent,  striate,  sometimes  produced  below  their 
insertion.  Flowers  white,  yellowish,  purple  or  red,  in  clusters  of  2,  3 or  more  on 
lateral  nodes  in  the  upper  portion  of  long  axillary  peduncles.  Bracts  and 
bracteoles  usually  very  deciduous. 

A considerable  genus,  dispersed  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World. 
Several  species  long  cultivated  in  various  countries  have  given  rise  to  many  forms  published  as 


separate  species,  although  frequently  undistinguishable  except  by  their  origin. — Bentli. 

Stipules  not  produced  below  their  insertion.  Pod  flattened. 

Bracteoles  broad,  striate,  persistent,  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Flowers  small, 

pale  yellowish-white 1.  P.  vulgaris. 

Bracteoles  small  and  very  deciduous.  Flowers  large,  pink  or  whitish  with 

the  wings  purple 2.  P.  Truxillensix. 

Stipules  oblong,  produced  below  their  insertion.  Pod  at  length  nearly 

cylindrical 3.  P.  Mungo. 

Shrubby,  suberect,  branches  flexuose.  Stipules  conspicuous,  lanceolate- 
setaceous.  Calyx  tubuloso-campanulate  ; corolla  purple  and  white.  Pod 
nearly  terete,  2 to  4in.  long 4.  P.  semierectus. 


1.  *1?.  vulgaris  (common),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  392  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
257.  Glabrous  or  silky-pubescent  when  young,  dwarf  and  erect  or  tall  and 
twining.  Leaflets  broad,  acuminate,  2 to  3in.  long  or  more,  the  stipollae  small, 
obtuse.  Stipules  small,  not  produced  below  their  insertion.  Peduncles  short, 
with  few  rather  small  pale  yellow-green  or  whitish  flowers.  Bracteoles  ovate, 
striate,  as  long  as  the  calyx,  and  persistent.  Calyx  upper  lobe  very  short,  broad, 
obtuse  and  entire.  Pod  broadly  linear,  flattened,  straight  or  slightly  falcate. — 
Benth.  in  Mart.  FI.  Bras.  Papil.  182,  with  the  synonyms  quoted. 

Hab.:  Now  and  again  met  with  as  a stray  from  cultivation. 

The  species  is  the  most  generally  cultivated  in  all  warm  and  temperate  countries.  Its  origin 
is  uncertain,  probably  Asiatic. — Bentli. 

2.  P.  Truxillensis  (found  at  Truxille,  Mexico),  H.  B.  and  K.;  DC.  Prod. 
ii.  391  ; Bentli.  LI.  Austr.  ii.  257.  Twining  or  trailing  at  the  base,  glabrous  or 
more  or  less  hairy,  the  hairs  reflexed  on  the  stem,  appressed  or  silky  on  the 
leaves.  Leaflets  usually  broadly  ovate,  obtuse  or  shortly  acuminate,  2 to  4in. 
long,  the  terminal  one  somewhat  rhomboid,  the  lateral  ones  very  oblique,  those  of 
the  upper  leaves  narrower,  the  stipellte  small,  oblong.  Stipules  small,  not  pro- 
duced below  their  insertion.  Peduncles  usually  long,  with  few  flowering  nodes 


Phaseol  ns.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


433 


at  or  near  the  end.  Pedicels  very  short.  Bracteoles  shorter  than  the  calyx  and 
very  deciduous.  Flowers  rather  large,  mixed  purplish  or  pink  and  white  or  the 
standard  yellowish.  Calyx  upper  lobes  short,  very  broad  and  obtuse,  the  lowest 
narrow  acute  and  as  long  as  or  longer  than  the  tube.  Standard  and  wings  nearly 
lin.  long;  keel  forming  2 or  3 coils.  Pod  flattened,  straight  or  falcate,  attaining 
3 or  4in.  in  length  and  nearly  -J-in.  in  breadth. — P.  rostratus,  Wall.  PI.  As.  Rar.  i. 
56,  t.  63  ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  34. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  It.  Brown  : Bustard  Bay,  Endeavour  River,  &c., 
Banks  and  Solander ; Port  Curtis  and  Barnard  Island,  M'Gillivray. 

The  species  is  frequently  sent  to  Europe  as  indigenous  in  collections  from  almost  all  tropical 
countries,  but  it  is  also  frequently  cultivated.  The  numerous  synonyms,  as  far  as  ascertained, 
are  quoted  in  Mart.  FI.  Bras.  Papil.  186. — Benth. 

3.  P.  Mungo  (Indian  name),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  395  ; Benth.  FI.  Anstr. 
ii.  257.  “ Komin,”  Rockhampton,  “Kadolo,”  Cleveland  Bay,  Thozet.  More  or 
less  hirsute,  the  hairs  reflexed  on  the  branches,  appressed  on  the  leaves,  the 
Australian  specimens  elongated  and  twining,  but,  like  P.  vulgaris,  it  is  more 
generally  cultivated  as  dwarf  and  erect.  Leaflets  mostly  ovate,  acute  or 
acuminate,  entire  or  minutely  3-lobed,  the  lateral  ones  very  oblique,  2 to  Sin. 
long.  Stipules  rather  large,  oblong,  produced  below  their  insertion  so  as  to 
appear  peltate.  Flowers  rather  small,  pale  yellow,  in  2 or  3 clusters  at  the  end 
of  the  peduncle  or  rarely  more  .numerous  in  a somewhat  elongated  raceme. 
Bracteoles  small  and  very  deciduous.  Calyx  2 upper  lobes  very  short  and  broad, 
the  lowest  nearly  as  long  as  the  tube  and  acute.  Keel  spirally  twisted  to  one 
side,  with  a spur  near  the  base  of  the  lamina  on  the  same  side  only.  Pods 
spreading  or  reflexed,  cylindrical  when  ripe,  2 to  3in.  long,  scarcely  3 lines  broad, 
hirsute  or  rarely  glabrous. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander;  Gould  Island,  M'Gillivray ; limestone  hills, 
Leichhardt;  Bowen  River,  Bowman ; Rockhampton,  Dallachy. 

The  Australian  specimens  belong  chiefly  to  the  slender  twining  form,  which  includes  P, 
radiatus,  Roxb..  or  P.  Pioxbnrghii,  W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  246,  and  P.  trinervins , Heyne,  W.  and  Am. 
Prod.  245.  This,  like  the  erect  form,  including  P.  Max,  Linn.,  as  well  as  P.  Mungo,  appears  to 
be  very  abundant,  wild  or  cultivated,  in  tropical  Asia,  but  not  in  America. — Benth. 

Roots,  after  being  baked,  eaten. — Thozet. 

4.  P.  semierectus  (slightly  erect),  Linn.:  DC.  Prod.  ii.  396  ; Baker  in  Hook. 
FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  201.  A shrubby  often  straggling  plant,  the  branches  suberect, 
terete,  clothed  with  long  deciduous  deflexed  hairs.  Stipules  J to  nearly  Jin.  long, 
lanceolate-setaceous.  Leaflets  entire,  membranous,  soon  glabrescent,  thicker 
than  in  most  of  the  species,  the  end  one  ovate,  entire,  acute  or  subobtuse,  2 to 
3in.  long,  usually  deltoid  at  the  base.  Peduncles  reaching  1ft.  and  racemes 
Jft.  long  ; pedicels  very  short,  geminate.  Bracteoles  setaceous.  Calyx  tubuloso- 
campanulate  with  aristate  teeth,  under  Jin.  long,  split  open  by  the  pod.  Corolla 
deep-purple  and  white,  3 or  4 times  longer  than  the  calyx.  Pod  3 to  4in. 
long,  glabrous,  rather  recurved,  many-seeded. — P.  psoraleoides,  W.  and  A.  Prod. 
244  ; Wight  Ic.  t.  249. 

Hab.:  Found  in  many  parts  of  India,  tropical  America,  Malaya,  and  naturalised  in  Queensland. 


61.  VIGNA,  Savi. 

(After  Dominie  Vigna.) 

(Scytalis  and  Strophostyles,  E.  Mey.;  Plectrotropis,  Schum.) 

Calyx  2 upper  lobes  united  into  one,  or  more  or  less  distinct.  Standard  broad, 
spreading ; wings  obliquely  obovate,  adhering  to  the  keel  ; keel  incurved,  either 
obtuse  or  with  an  obliquely  incurved  beak,  not  forming  a complete  spire.  Upper 
stamen  free,  the  others  united ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  nearly  sessile,  with 
several  ovules ; style  thickened  upwards  and  longitudinally  bearded  on  the  inner 


434 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[ Vigna . 


side  ; stigma  very  oblique  or  on  the  inner  side  of  the  style.  Pod  linear,  nearly 
terete  when  ripe,  2-valved.  Seeds  with  a small  or  shortly  linear  hilum,  not 
strophiolate. — Herbs  either  prostrate  and  trailing  or  twining,  or  short  and  erect 
in  the  same  species.  Leaves  pinnately  trifoliolate,  stipellate,  the  leaflets  entire 
or  3-lobed.  Stipules  usually  persistent,  rarely  produced  below  their  insertion. 
Flowers  greenish  yellow  or  purple,  on  very  short  pedicels,  in  clusters  of  2 or  3 on 
lateral  nodes  in  the  upper  portion  of  long  axillary  peduncles,  or  more  frequently 
only  1 or  2 such  clusters  at  the  end  of  the  peduncle.  Bracts  and  bracteoles 
usually  very  deciduous. 

The  genus  is  as  widely  distributed  as  Phaseolus  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  New  and  the 
Old  World,  and  comprises  several  extensively  cultivated  species.  It  only  differs  indeed  from 
Phaseolus  in  the  keel  not  forming  complete  spires.  Of  the  four  Australian  species,  three  have  a 
very  wide  range  in  the  New  and  the  Old  World,  the  fourth  is  endemic. — Benth. 

Calyx-lobes  acute,  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  2 upper  united  at  the  base  only. 


Keel  with  a long  obliquely  incurved  beak I.  V.  vexillata. 

Calyx-lobes  short,  the  2 upper  ones  united  into  one  broad  entire  one.  Keel 
rather  acute,  but  not  beaked. 

Leaflets  obovate,  very  obtuse 2.  V.  lutea. 

Leaflets  mostly  ovate,  acute  or  acuminate,  or  narrow  and  lanceolate  or 
linear. 

Flowers  7 or  8 lines  long.  Leaflets  mostly  ovate 3.  V.  luteola. 

Flowers  about  5 lines  long.  Leaflets  mostly  lanceolate  or  linear  ...  4.  V.  lanceolata. 


1.  V.  vexillata  (standard  prominent),  Bentli.  in  Mart.  FI.  Bras.  Papil. 
193,  t.  50,  /.  1 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  258.  Stems,  from  a tuberous  rootstock, 
twining  and  hirsute  as  well  as  the  leaves,  the  hairs  reflexed  on  the  branches,  more 
appressed  and  scattered  on  the  leaves,  rarely  at  length  glabrous.  Leaflets  usually 
ovate-lanceolate  in  the  lower  leaves,  narrow-lanceolate  in  the  upper  ones,  2 to  4in. 
long  and  entire,  but  varying  in  breadth  and  size.  Stipules  cordate-lanceolate, 
sometimes  shortly  auriculate.  Flowers  greenish-yellow,  more  or  less  tinged  with 
purple,  larger  than  in  most  species,  2 to  4 together  at  the  summit  of  the  peduncle. 
Calyx  4 to  5 lines  long,  the  lobes  lanceolate,  acuminate,  as  long  as  the  tube,  the 
2 upper  ones  shortly  united  at  the  base.  Standard  10  or  11  lines  diameter, 
reflexed ; wings  rather  shorter,  one  with  a long  auricle  at  the  base,  the  other  with 
scarcely  any ; keel  with  a long  incurved  almost  involute  oblique  beak,  not  how- 
ever forming  a complete  spire,  and  with  a lateral  spur  on  one  side  below  the  beak. 
Stigma  thick,  on  the  inner  side  of  the  style  above  the  beard.  Pod  nearly  cylin- 
drical, straight  or  slightly  curved,  3 to  4in.  long,  about  2 lines  broad. — Phaseolus 
vexillatus,  Linn.;  Jacq.  Hort.  Vind.  t.  102  ; Vigna  hirta,  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  637  ; V. 
tuberosa,  A.  Rich.  Tent.  FI.  Abyss,  i.  217,  t.  42. 

Hab.:  Bustard  Bay  and  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander ; Broadsound,  &c.,  R.  Broivn  ; 
Moreton  Bay,  Bidwill ; Pine  River,  Fitzalan  ; Burdekin  and  Burnett  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Port 
Curtis,  M‘Gillivray  ; Bowen  River,  Boicman;  Rockhampton,  Thozet,  Dallachy. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  tropical  Asia,  Africa,  and  America.  By  the  obliquity  of  the 
flower  and  length  of  the  beak  it  is  intermediate  in  some  respects  between  Vigna  and  Phaseolus, 
and  has  been  placed  alternately  by  botanists  in  either  of  these  genera  or  in  Dolichos,  or  has  been 
proposed  as  a distinct  genus  under  the  name  of  Plectrotropis  by  Schumacher  and  of  Strophostyles 
by  E.  Meyer,  as  appears  by  the  extensive  synonymy  collected  in  the  “ Flora  Brasiliensis  ” above 
quoted. — Benth. 

2.  V.  lutea  (yellow),  A.  Gray,  Bot.  Amer.  Plxpl.  Exped.  i.  454  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  259.  Rather  coarse,  prostrate,  trailing  or  shortly  twining,  nearly 
glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  hoary  or  silky,  with  centrally  fixed  appressed  hairs. 
Leaflets  orbicular,  obovate  or  ovate-rhomboid,  usually  very  obtuse,  1^  to  Sin. 
long.  Stipules  short  and  broad  ; stipellte  obtuse.  Flowers  yellow,  like  those  of 
V.  luteola,  in  few  clusters  crowded  at  the  end  of  the  peduncle.  Calyx  1£  line  long, 
the  lobes  or  teeth  shorter  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  ones  united  into  one  short 
and  broad  one.  Standard  above  -|in.  diameter  or  rather  more  ; keel  broad,  much 
incurved,  rather  acute,  but  not  beaked.  Stigma  oblong,  very  oblique  or  quite  on 


Vigna.\ 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


435 


the  inner  side  of  the  style  above  the  dense  beard.  Pod  glabrous,  straight  or 
curved,  about  3in.  long,  Jin.  wide. — Dolichos  luteus,  Swartz,  FI.  Ind.  Occid.  iii. 
1246 ; V.  retusa,  Walp.  Rep.  i.  778 ; Harv.  and  Sond.  FI.  Cap.  ii.  242  ( Scytalis , 

E.  Mey.);  V.  anomala,  Walp.  Rep.  i.  779  ( Scytalis , Vog.). 

Hab  : Harvey’s  Bay,  R.  Brown ; islands  along  the  coast  down  to  Moreton  Bay,  M'Gillivray, 

F.  v.  Mueller,  Thozet,  and  others. 

The  species  appears  to  be  not  unfrequent  in  maritime  sands  in  tropical  Asia  and  islands  of  the 
Pacific,  and  in  Southern  Africa,  more  rare  in  the  W.  Indies.  I have  not  seen  Swartz’s  specimens, 
but  his  description  leaves  no  doubt  that  A.  Gray  is  right  in  referring  his  plant  to  the  present 
one. — Benth. 

3.  V.  luteola  (pale  yellow),  Benth.  in  Mart.  FI.  Bras.  Papil.  194,  t.  50,  f. 
2,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  260.  Prostrate,  trailing  or  twining,  often  hirsute,  espe- 
cially when  young,  sometimes  nearly  glabrous,  very  rarely  with  a few  of  the 
centrally  affixed  hairs  of  V.  lutea.  Leaflets  very  variable,  usually  ovate  or  ovate- 
lanceolate,  1 to  2in.  long,  entire  or  slightly  sinuately  3-lobed,  the  upper  ones 
sometimes  longer  and  narrower,  almost  always  acute  or  acuminate.  Stipules 
small.  Flowers  pale-yellow,  in  few  clusters  at  the  end  of  the  peduncle.  Calyx 
scarcely  2 lines  long,  the  two  upper  lobes  united  into  one  very  short  and  broad 
one,  the  lowest  about  as  long  as  the  tube.  Standard  7 or  8 lines  diameter  ; keel 
as  long  as  the  wings,  broad,  much  curved  and  rather  acute,  but  not  beaked. 
Stigma  oblong,  very  oblique  or  quite  on  the  inner  side  of  the  style  above  the  dense 
beard.  Pod  hirsute  or  rarely  at  length  glabrous,  nearly  terete,  often  torulose,  2 
to  3in.  long,  scarcely  Jin.  broad. — Dolichos  luteolus,  Jacq.  Hort.  Vind.  t.  90  ; 
Vir/na  glabra  and  V.  villosa,  Savi  ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  401. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander ; Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

The  species  is  common  in  tropical  America  and  temperate  N.  America,  chiefly  near  the  sea  ; 
it  is  also  in  tropical  Africa.  I have  not  seen  any  Asiatic  specimens,  which  leads  me  to  doubt  in 
some  measure  the  identification  of  the  Australian  ones.  I can,  however,  detect  no  difference 
between  them  and  some  of  the  common  American  forms. — Benth. 

4.  V.  lanceolata  (lanceolate  leaflets),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Prop.  Austr.  350, 
and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  260.  Glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent,  short  and  erect  or 
elongated  and  twining,  but  always  more  slender  than  F.  luteola.  Leaflets 
usually  lanceolate,  obtuse  or  rather  acute,  1J  to  2 or  rarely  3in.  long,  entire  or 
the  terminal  one  hastately  lobed  on  each  side  at  the  base,  the  lateral  ones  on  one 
side  only,  those  of  the  lower  leaves  sometimes  short  and  ovate,  in  the  upper  ones 
long  and  linear.  Flowers  much  smaller  than  in  V.  luteola,  otherwise  like  them, 
in  few  clusters  at  the  end  of  the  peduncle.  Calyx  about  1 line  long,  the  2 upper 
lobes  united  into  one  very  short  and  broad  one,  the  lowest  not  so  long  as  the  tube. 
Standard  about  5 lines  diameter,  with  the  2 callosities  and  indexed  auricles  of  the 
allied  species ; keel  broad,  much  incurved,  rather  acute,  but  not  beaked.  Pod 
glabrous  or  pubescent,  nearly  terete,  1 to  2in.  long. — V.  suberecta , Benth  in  Mitch. 
Trop.  Austr.  388. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander;  Broadsound,  R.  Brown;  Mount  Owen  and 
Mount  Faraday,  Mitchell;  Archer’s  Creek,  Leichhardt ; Bowen  River,  Bowman. 

Var.  Jiliformis.  Stems  long,  slender  and  twining.  Leaflets  all  linear  or  linear-lanceolate. 
Flowers  smaller.  I think  fragments  of  this  variety  have  reached  me  from  the  Gulf  country. 

The  pod  in  some  of  R.  Brown’s  specimens,  with  lanceolate  leaves,  is  much  flatter  than  in  the 
other  specimens  seen  in  fruit,  but  I can  detect  no  specific  differences. — Benth. 


62.  DOLICHOS,  Linn. 

(From  the  long  growth  of  some  species.) 

Calyx-lobes  short,  the  2 upper  ones  united  into  one  broad  entire  or  emarginate 
one.  Standard  orbicular,  recurved  or  spreading,  with  2 indexed  auricles  at  the 
base  and  2 callosities  inside  ; wings  obovate,  falcate,  adhering  to  the  keel,  nearly 
as  long  as  the  standard ; keel  much  incurved,  often  beaked,  but  not  spiral. 
Upper  stamen  free,  the  others  united  ; anthers  uniform,  Ovary  nearly  sessile, 


486 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


[Dolichos. 


with  several  ovules  ; style  thickened  upwards,  either  bearded  longitudinally  on 
the  inner  side  or  hairy  ail  round,  at  least  round  the  stigma,  which  is  small  and 
terminal.  Pod  flattened,  usually  falcate  and  acute,  2-valved.  Seeds  with  a 

small  or  shortly  linear  hilum,  not  strophiolate. — Herbs  often  woody  at  the  base, 
twining  trailing  or  short  and  suberect.  Leaves  pinnately  trifoliolate,  stipellate. 
Stipules  small.  Flowers  sometimes  few  together,  on  very  short  axillary 
peduncles  or  even  solitary,  with  striate  persistent  bracts  and  bracteoles,  almost  as 
in  Clitoria , more  frequently  in  axillary  racemes,  clustered  on  lateral  nodes  along 
the  peduncle,  with  very  small  and  deciduous  bracts  and  bracteoles,  as  in  Vigna 
and  Phaseolus. 

The  genus  is  chiefly  S.  African,  with  a few  tropical  Asiatic  and  S.  American  species.  The  only 
Australian  one  is  widely  spread  over  E.  India  and  S.E.  Africa. 

Lablab.— Pod  oblong,  2 to  4-seeded  ; style  flattened  upwards,  narrowed  at  the 
base 1.  D.  J,ablab. 

Dolichos  proper. — Pod  linear,  many-seeded;  style  filiform,  not  narrowed  at 
the  base.  Flowers  1 to  3 on  short  axillary  pedicels,  without  a common 
peduncle 2.  D.  biflorus. 


1.  Lablab  (its  Egyptian  name),  Linn.;  Baker  in  Oliver  FI.  Trap.  Afr.  ii. 
210.  A wide-climbing  perennial,  with  subglabrous  stems.  Leaflets  8,  mem- 
branous, acute,  glabrous  above,  nearly  or  quite  so  below ; central  one  ovate- 
deltoid,  3 to  Gin.  long,  broadly  spathulately  narrowed  at  the  base.  Flowers  in 
fascicled  lax  racemes,  3 to  Gin.  long,  on  firm  elongated  peduncles.  Calyx  broadly 
campanulate,  2f  to  3 lines  long,  subglabrous,  with  a pair  of  roundish  deciduous 
bracteoles  at  the  base,  2 upper  teeth  connate,  the  others  shorter  than  the  tube. 
Corolla  reddish  or  pale,  6 to  9 lines  deep,  the  keel  abruptly  incurved.  Pod  If  to 
2in.  long,  7 to  10  lines  broad,  narrowed  at  the  base,  the  upper  suture  nearly 
straight,  the  face  glabrescent,  rarely  persistently  pubescent.  Seeds  2 to  4 ; style 
flattened  upwards,  not  twisted,  narrowed  at  the  base. — Bot.  Mag.  t.  896 ; Lablab 
vulgaris,  Savi,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  401  ; L.  uncinatus,  A.  Braun,  in  Schimp.  Hb.  Abyss.; 
D.  crenatifructus,  Steud.  in  Schimp.  Hb.  Abyss.  513  ; D.  purpurens,  Linn.  Bot. 
Mag.  t.  830. — Baker  l.c. 

Hab.:  Commonly  cultivated  in  tropical  countries  for  its  green  pods,  which  are  used  as  a 
vegetable.  Met  with  in  Queensland  as  a stray  from  cultivation.  The  plant  is  extremely  variable 
under  cultivation  in  size  and  shape  of  pod  and  colour  of  the  flowers  and  seed. 

2.  !D.  biflorus  (2-flowered),  Linn.;  I)C.  Prod.  ii.  398 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 

261.  “ Mal-kan,”  Cape  Bedford,  “ Tandaji,”  Butcher’s  Hill,  B,oth.  Either 

dwarf  and  nearly  erect  or  elongated  and  twining,  softly  pubescent  in  all  its 
parts  or  at  length  glabrous.  Leaflets  ovate,  acuminate,  1 to  2in.  long, 
the  lateral  ones  very  oblique.  Stipules  ovate  or  lanceolate,  striate,  persistent. 
Flowers  usually  1 or  2,  rarely  3 or  4,  clustered  in  the  axils  on  a very  short  common 
peduncle,  of  a yellowish  colour,  not  fin.  long.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  narrow, 
almost  subulate  or  the  lower  ones  broader  and  striate.  Calyx-lobes  subulate, 
longer  than  the  tube,  the  lowest  longer  than  the  others.  Standard  broadly 
obovate  ; wings  narrow  ; keel  much  incurved,  with  a short  obtuse  beak.  Style 
filiform,  glabrous,  except  a small  tuft  of  hairs  round  the  terminal  stigma.  Pod 
falcate,  usually  If  to  2in.  long  and  about  4 lines  broad. — D.  unifiorus,  Lam.;  DC. 
Prod.  ii.  398  ; L>.  axillaris,  E.  Mey.;  Harv.  and  Sond.  FI.  Cap.  ii.  245. 

Hab.:  Cape  Bedford,  Cooktown,  and  Butcher’s  Hill,  Roth. 

The  species  is  dispersed  over  tropical  Asia  and  S.E.  Africa.  In  inflorescence,  and  in  the  style 
not  longitudinally  bearded,  it  differs  from  most  species  of  the  genus,  and  approaches  in  some 
respects  Clitoria.  The  lowest  flowers  are  apparently  sometimes  small  and  apetalous.— Benth 

Grown  in  India  for  its  seeds,  which  are  called  “ Madras  Gram.” 

Boots  eaten  after  being  roasted. — Roth. 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


437 


63.  DUN  BARI  A,  W.  and  Arn. 

(After  Professor  Dunbar.) 

Calyx-lobes  acuminate,  the  2 upper  ones  united  into  1 entire  or  slightly  toothed 
one.  Standard  obovate  or  orbicular,  erect  or  reflexed,  with  inflexed  auricles  at 
the  base  and  2 callosities  inside  ; keel  incurved,  obtuse.  Upper  stamen  free,  the 
others  united  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; style  filifonn, 
incurved  and  rather  thickened  about  the  middle  ; stigma  terminal,  small.  Pod 
linear,  flat,  often  falcate,  acuminate  ; valves  rather  thin,  not  indented  between 
the  seeds.  Seeds  nearly  orbicular,  with  a short  or  oblong  hilum  and  a thin  or 
small  strophiole,  scarcely  fleshy. — Trailing  or  twining  herbs,  usually  tomentose, 
often  viscid.  Leaves  pinnately  trifoliolate  without  stipellae,  leaflets  usually 
sprinkled  with  resinous  dots  underneath.  Stipules  striate  or  small  or  none. 
Flowers  usually  yellow,  in  axillary  racemes,  singly  scattered  along  the  rhachis  or 
rarely  solitary  in  the  axils.  Bracts  usually  broad  and  membranous,  but  very 
deciduous.  Bracteoles  none. 

The  genus  extends,  like  Atylosia,  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  the  Australian  species 
being  one  of  the  most  widely  dispersed.  Nearly  allied  to  Atylosia,  it  has  the  pod  almost  of  a 
Dolichos,  differing  from  Rhynchosia  only  in  the  more  numerous  ovules. — Benth. 

1.  Do  COnspersa  (sprinkled  with  resinous  dots),  Benth.  in  PI.  Jungh.  i.  241, 
and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  262.  A slender  twiner,  hoary  all  over  with  a minute  tomentum, 
scarcely  becoming  glabrous  when  old,  and  more  or  less  sprinkled  with  r-esinous  dots. 
Leaflets  broadly  rhomboidal,  rarely  lin.  long,  entire  or  the  terminal  one  broadly 
sinuate  3-lobed.  Flowers  rather  small,  yellow,  2 together  or  rarely  solitary  in  the 
axils  of  the  leaves,  on  short  pedicels.  Calyx-lobes  lanceolate-falcate,  the  upper 
and  lower  ones  longer  than  the  tube.  Pod  nearly  straight  or  falcate,  obliquely 
acuminate,  1 to  l£in.  long,  glabrous  or  slightly  tomentose.  Seeds  6 to  8,  with  an 
oblong  hilum  and  a rather  thicker  strophiole  than  in  most  species. — Dolichos  (? ) 
rhynchosioides,  Miq.  FI.  Ind.  Bat.  i.  part  1,  185. 

Hab  : Dunk  Island,  M‘Gillivray. 

The  species  ranges  over  the  eastern  provinces  of  India  and  the  Archipelago  up  to  S.  China. 
It  has  very  much  the  aspect  of  some  of  the  common  trailing  Rhynchosias,  but  the  pod  is  quite 
different. — Benth. 


64.  ATYLOSIA,  W.  and  Arn. 

(A  and  tulos ; no  protuberance.) 

(Cantharospermum,  W.  and  Arn .) 

Calyx-lobes  acuminate,  the  2 upper  ones  united  into  1 entire  or  slightly  toothed 
one.  Standard  orbicular,  reflexed,  with  2 inflexed  auricles  at  the  base  and  often 
with  2 slight  callosities  inside  ; keel  incurved,  obtuse.  Upper  stamen  free,  the 
others  united;  anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; style  filiform, 
incurved  and  rather  thickened  above  the  middle  ; stigma  terminal,  small.  Pod 
oblong  or  broadly  linear,  straight,  scarcely  acuminate,  2-valved,  with  partitions 
between  the  seeds,  the  valves  coriaceous  or  rarely  thin,  transversely  indented 
between  the  seeds.  Seeds  ovate  or  orbicular,  with  an  oblong  hilum  and  a thick 
fleshy  strophiole. — Trailing  or  twining  herbs  or  erect  shrubs,  usually  tomentose 
or  softly  villous.  Leaves  pinnately  trifoliolate,  without  stipeline  ; leaflets  usually 
glandular-dotted  underneath.  Stipules  small  or  none.  Flowers  yellow,  solitary 
or  clustered  in  the  axils  or  at  the  end  of  axillary  peduncles.  Bracts  usually  broad 
and  membranous,  but  so  deciduous  as  to  be  rarely  seen.  Bracteoles  none. 

The  genus  extends  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago  and  westward  to  the  Mauritius.  Of  the 
Australian  species,  one  is  common  over  the  whole  range  of  the  genus,  the  others  are  endemic. 
F.  v.  Mueller  proposes  to  reunite  it  with  Cajanus,  to  which  it  is  closely  allied,  but  the  pod  is 
differently  shaped,  and  the  strophiole  appears  to  be  constant.  It  only  differs  from  some  sections 
of  Rhynchosia  in  the  ovules  always  more  than  2. — Benth. 


488 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Aty  Ionia. 


Stems  trailing  or  twining. 

Pod  broad,  thin,  transversely  reticulate.  Leaflets  broadly  obovate  or 

orbicular 1.  A.  mannorata. 

Pod  coriaceous  with  deeply  depressed  transverse  lines  between  the  seeds. 

Leaflets  rhomboid  ovate  or  elliptical. 

Pedicels  axillary,  solitary  or  clustered  with  scarcely  any  common 

peduncle 2.  A.  scarabteoides. 

Peduncles  axillary,  often  exceeding  the  leaves 3.  A.  reticulata. 

Stems  erect,  shrubby  at  the  base.  Pod  coriaceous.  Leaflets  very  rugose, 
thick  and  soft.  Pod  villous,  with  long  hairs. 

Terminal  leaflets  at  some  distance  from  the  lateral  one 4.  A.  yrandijlora. 

Terminal  leaflets  close  between  the  2 lateral  ones 5 .A.  pluriflora. 


1.  A.  marmorata  (marbled  or  mottled  pods),  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  268. 
Stems  rather  slender,  trailing  or  twining,  pubescent  or  hirsute.  Leaflets  very 
broadly  obovate  orbicular  or  broader  than  long,  very  obtuse,  1 to  l^in.  long, 
softly  pubescent  when  young,  rather  rigid  and  nearly  glabrous  when  old. 
Peduncles  solitary  or  2 together,  often  slightly  exceeding  the  leaves,  either 
1 -flowered  or  bearing  1 or  2 pairs  of  flowers.  Calyx  slightly  tomentose,  about 
4 lines  long,  the  lobes  rather  longer  than  the  tube.  Petals  5 or  6 lines  long. 
Ovary  with  about  4 ovules.  Pod  very  flat,  about  lin.  long,  and  nearly  4in. 
broad,  mottled  with  purple  and  thinly  hairy,  the  valves  very  thin  and  marked 
with  fine  transverse  reticulations,  the  transverse  depressed  lines  between  the  seeds 
very  faint. — Glycine  marmorata , R.  Br.  Herb. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown,  Henne ; Nebo  Creek  and  Bowen  River, 
Bowman  ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan. 

The  species  is  allied  to  the  E.  Indian  A.  platycarpa,  Benth.,  but  the  leaflets  are  differently 
shaped,  the  pod  straighter,  Ac.  These  two  species  belong  to  the  section  Rhynchosioides,  which 
only  differs  from  the  section  Notnismia  of  Rhynchosia  in  the  number  of  ovules. — Benth. 


2.  A.  scarabaeoides  (beetle-like),  Benth.  in  PI.  Jungh.  i.  242,  and  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  263.  Trailing  or  twining,  slender,  but  often  extending  to  several  feet, 
softly  tomentose  in  all  its  parts.  Leaflets  obovate  or  elliptical,  obtuse  or  the 
upper  ones  narrower  and  almost  acute,  1 to  l^in.  long,  rugose  and  soft. 
Peduncles  very  short  or  almost  none,  bearing  1 to  5 shortly  pedicellate  flowers, 
about  5 lines  long.  Calyx-lobes  falcate,  acute,  rather  longer  than  the  tube  and 
nearly  as  long  as  the  petals.  Ovary  with  6 to  8 ovules.  Pod  about  f to  lin. 
long  and  3 to  4 lines  broad,  softly  tomentose  and  hairy,  the  valves  coriaceous, 
marked  between  the  seeds  by  deep  transverse  lines  and  furrows. — Rhynchosia  (?  ) 
scarabaoides,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  337  ; Cantharospermum  gaueijiorum , W.  and  Arn. 
Prod.  255. 

Hab.:  Port  Denison,  Burdekin  River,  Ac.,  Boioman,  Dallachy. 

The  species  is  common  in  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  extending  from  the  Mauritius  to  S. 
China.  The  Australian  specimens  have  the  leaflets  rather  narrow,  but  do  not  otherwise  differ 
from  the  common  form.  This  and  all  the  following  species  belong  to  the  section  Cantharo- 
spermum. corresponding  to  the  section  Ptychocentrum  of  Rhynchosia. — Benth. 


3.  A.  reticulata  (netted),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  263.  “ Korlbun,”  Endeavour 
River,  Roth.  Stems  elongated,  trailing  or  rarely  twining,  rather  coarse,  rusty- 
hirsute  or  velvety.  Leaflets  ovate  or  rhomboidal,  obtuse,  1^  to  Sin.  long,  rugose 
and  softly  velvety-tomentose.  Peduncles  usually  2 or  3 in  each  axil,  of  unequal 
lengths,  bearing  at  the  end  a cluster  or  short  raceme  of  about  3 to  9 flowers,  the 
pedicels  at  first  very  short,  but  often  at  length  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Calyx  rusty- 
villous,  fully  6 lines  long,  the  lobes  linear  acuminate,  the  upper  or  lower  ones 
about  three  times  as  long  as  the  tube,  the  lateral  ones  rather  shorter.  Petals 
scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx.  Ovary  with  about  6 ovules.  Pod  about  lin.  long 


Atylosia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


439 


and  4 lines  wide,  very  villous,  with  long  hairs,  the  valves  coriaceous,  marked  with 
deep  rather  oblique  transverse  furrows  between  the  seeds. — Dolichos  reticulatus, 
Ait.  Hort.  Kew,  ed.  1,  iii.  33  ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  400. 

Hab.  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander, 
A.  Cunningham;  Shoalwater  Bay,  R.  Brown  ; Rockhampton,  Dallachy. 

The  roots,  after  being  roasted  and  hammered,  used  for  food. — Roth. 

4.  A.  grandifolia  (large-leaved),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  264. 
An  erect  branching,  rusty-tomentose  or  softly  villous  shrub,  closely  resembling 
in  other  respects  A . reticulata.  Leaflets  broadly  ovate  or  rhomboidal,  obtuse  or 
rather  acute,  2 to  3in.  long,  very  rugose  and  soft.  Flowers  in  irregular  clusters 
or  short  racemes,  pedunculate  in  the  upper  axils,  the  upper  peduncles  short, 
forming  an  irregular  terminal  leafy  panicle.  Pedicels  at  first  very  short,  or 
rarely  attaining  the  length  of  the  calyx.  Calyx  rusty  villous,  about  -Jin.  long, 
the  lobes  about  twice  as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx. 
Pod  as  in  A.  reticulata,  about  lin.  long  and  4 lines  wide,  very  villous  with  long 
hairs,  the  valves  coriaceous,  marked  with  deep  transverse  furrows  between  the 
seeds. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  Burnett  Ranges,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Burdekin 
Expedition,  Fitzalan;  Fitzroy  River,  Bowman  ; Port  Denison,  Dallachy. 

5.  A.  pluriflora  (flowers  numerous),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
264.  Erect  and  shrubby,  clothed  with  a soft  woolly  or  silky  tomentum,  some- 
times rusty,  usually  very  white  on  the  branches.  Leaflets  3,  from  obovate,  very 
obtuse,  and  about  lin.  long,  to  elliptical-oblong,  obtuse  or  almost  acute  and  near 
2in.  long,  more  or  less  rhomboid,  very  rugose  and  soft,  the  terminal  one  inserted 
close  between  the  lateral  ones  instead  of  being  raised  at  some  distance  above 
them  as  in  all  the  other  Australian  species  ; common  petiole  about  6 to  9 lines 
long,  slender.  Peduncles  in  the  upper  axils  bearing  an  irregular  head  or  umbel- 
like cluster  of  flowers,  the  pedicels  at  first  very  short,  at  length  nearly  as  long  as 
the  calyx.  Calyx  softly  villous,  4 to  5 lines  long,  the  lobes  not  much  longer  than 
the  tube.  Petals  exceeding  the  calyx,  attaining  about  7 lines.  Ovary  with  3 to 
6 ovules.  Pod  about  lin.  long,  very  villous  with  long  hairs,  the  valves  coriaceous, 
marked  with  deep  transverse  furrows  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  oval,  about  1^ 
line  long,  dark  with  somewhat  light-coloured  dots,  strophiole  oblong,  2-lobed. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  R.  Brown ; Burdekin  Expedition,  Fitzalan;  Rockhampton,  Thozet : near 
Princhester,  Bowman  : Thozet’s  River,  Dallachy ; Irvinebank,  F.  Bennett. 


65.  RHYNCHOSIA,  Lour. 

(Keel  of  flowers  beaked.) 

(Nomismia,  W.  and  Am.;  Copisma,  E.  Mey.) 

Calyx  2 upper  lobes  more  or  less  united.  Standard  obovate  or  orbicular,  usually 
with  indexed  auricles  at  the  base,  rarely  callous  inside  ; keel  incurved,  obtuse  or 
rarely  beaked  ; wings  narrower  or  rarely  obovate,  and  often  shorter.  Upper 
stamen  free,  the  others  united  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile  or  nearly  so,  with 
2 or  very  rarely  1 ovule  ; style  curved  above  the  middle  and  often  thickened  ; 
stigma  terminal.  Pod  flattened,  oblong  or  falcate,  2-valved,  rarely  divided  inside. 
Seeds  ovoid,  rounded  or  almost  reniform,  with  a lateral  short  or  oblong  hilum, 
the  funicle  centrally  attached,  with  or  without  a strophiole. — Trailing  or  twining 
herbs,  or  erect  undershrubs  or  low  shrubs,  often  tomentose  and  usually  sprinkled 
with  resinous  dots.  Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate,  rarely  in  species  not  Australian 
1 or  5-foliolate,  without  any  or  with  small  setaceous  stipellae.  Stipules  broad  or 
linear  or  very  small  or  none.  Peduncles  axillary,  bearing  a raceme  or  rarely 
single  flowers,  usually  yellow,  the  standard  often  streaked  with  purple.  Bracts 
very  deciduous  ; bracteoles  none. 


Part  II.  I 


440 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS.E. 


[Rhynchosia. 


A considerable  genus,  dispersed  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  globe,  especially  S.  America 
and  Africa,  with  several  Asiatic  species,  and  a few  in  N.  America. — Benth. 

Stems  erect  and  shrubby.  Leaflets  minutely  tomentose,  slightly  rugose. 

Peduncles  slender,  1 or  few-flowered.  Keel  obtuse.  Seeds  strophiolate  1.  R.  acutifolia. 
Stems  trailing  or  twining.  Flowers  racemose. 

Pod  falcate,  much  longer  than  broad.  Seeds  not  strophiolate. 

Pod  tomentose,  depressed  between  the  seeds.  Leaflets  mostly  above 


2in.  long.  Calyx-lobes  shorter  than  the  tube 2.  R.  Cunningliamii. 

Pod  nearly  glabrous  or  hairy.  Leaflets  not  much  above  lin.  long. 

Calyx-lobes  rather  longer  than  the  tube. 

Flowers  scarcely  above  3 lines  long 3.  R.  minima. 

Flowers  nearly  5 lines  long 4.  R.  australis. 


1.  R,  acutifolia  (leaves  acute),  F.  v.  ill.  Herb,  (tinder  Atylosia)  ; Benth.  FI. 

Austr.  ii.  266.  Erect  and  shrubby  but  slender,  minutely  and  closely  tomentose 
or  rarely  softly  pubescent.  Leaflets  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  f to  lfin.  long, 
almost  acute  or  shortly  acuminate,  sometimes  slightly  rugose.  Peduncles 
axillary,  slender,  bearing  2,  3 or  few  flowers  in  an  irregular  raceme.  Pedicels  at 
first  short,  often  at  length  as  long  as  the  calyx  and  filiform.  Flowers  yellow,  5 
or  6 lines  long.  Calyx-lobes  rather  longer  than  the  tube.  Standard  with  2 

callosities  inside ; keel  obtuse,  but  very  much  incurved.  Ovules  2.  Pod 

coriaceous  not  acuminate,  minutely  tomentose,  slightly  depressed  between  the 
seeds,  6 to  8 lines  long,  fully  3 lines  broad.  Seeds  with  a thick  fleshy  strophiole. 

Hab.:  Queensland,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

The  species  belongs  to  the  section  Ptychocentrum,  W.  and  Am. , differing  from  the  shrubby 
Atylosias  of  the  section  Scarabceoides  in  the  2 ovules.  From  the  above-mentioned  pod  with  the 
Gilbert  River  specimens  it  appears  that  there  may  be  occasionally  a third  ovule  as  occurs  also  in 
R.  minima  ; but  I found  2 only  in  all  the  ovaries  I examined. — Benth. 

2.  R,  Cunninghamii  (after  Alan  Cunningham),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  266. 
Twining  to  a considerable  length,  shortly  and  softly  pubescent  or  velvety. 
Leaflets  broadly  ovate-rliomboidal,  acuminate,  2 to  4in.  long,  rather  thin. 
Stipules  subulate-acuminate,  and  stipelhe  often  present.  Racemes  axillary,  not 
exceeding  the  leaves,  the  pedicels  2 to  4 lines  long,  often  2 together  or  the  upper 
ones  almost  clustered.  Calyx  tomentose,  2 to  24  lines  long,  the  lobes  obtuse, 
shorter  than  the  tube.  Standard  fully  twice  as  long,  slightly  callous  inside  ; keel 
obtuse.  Pod  slightly  falcate  and  shortly  acuminate,  slightly  contracted  between 
the  seeds,  nearly  fin.  long,  fin.  broad,  densely  tomentose  and  often  also  hairy, 
valves  coriaceous.  Seeds  ovoid,  bluish-black,  the  hilum  short,  lateral,  without 
any  strophiole. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander ; N.E.  coast,  A.  Cunningham;  Moreton  Bay,  C. 
Stuart ; Mount  Elliott  and  Thozet’s  Creek,  Fitzalan,  Dallac.hy  ; also  in  many  parts  of  southern 
Queensland.  In  flower  November  ; seed  ripe  December. 

The  species  is  very  closely  allied  to  the  common  S.  American  R.  phaseoloides,  DC.,  but  besides 
some  slight  differences  in  the  size  of  the  flowers,  the  seeds  in  that  species  have  usually,  if  not 
always,  a large  scarlet  spot  round  the  hilum. — Benth. 

3.  R.  minima  (flowers  small),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  385  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  267. 
Slender,  trailing  or  twining,  minutely  tomentose  or  nearly  glabrous.  Leaflets 
broadly  ovate-rhomboidal,  mostly  about  lin.  long  when  full-grown  but  often 
much  smaller,  with  minute  or  without  any  stipellte.  Stipules  also  very  small  or 
none.  Racemes  mostly  longer  than  the  leaves,  bearing  in  their  upper  portion 
scattered  pendulous  yellow  flowers  rarely  exceeding  3 lines  in  length,  on  very 
short  pedicels  ; in  the  lower  axils  the  peduncles  are  sometimes  very  short  and 
few-flowered.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  rather  longer  than  the  tube, 
the  2 upper  ones  united  to  the  base  or  to  the  middle.  Standard  obovate,  without 
callosities ; keel  obtuse.  Style  slightly  thickened  upwards.  Pod  falcate,  shortly 
acuminate  or  acute,  narrowed  at  the  base,  4 to  nearly  fin.  long,  shortly  tomentose- 
pubescent.  Seeds  without  any  strophiole. — Mart.  FI,  Bras.  Papil.  t.  54.  f.  2 ; 


Rhynchosia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMIN08-E. 


441 


R.  punctata,  DC.  Mem.  Leg.  t.  56,  and  Prod.  ii.  385  ; R.  nuda,  R.  ervoidea,  R. 
inedicaginea,  and  R.  rhombifolia,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  385,  386  ; II.  lawijiora,  Camb.  in 
Jacquem,  Voy.  t.  54  ; and  numerous  other  synonyms  cited  in  Mart.  FI.  Bras. 
Papil.  204. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  Keppel  Bay,  It.  Brown;  Bowen  and  Burdekin  Rivers,  Bowman,  Dallachy ; 
Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart. 

The  species  appears  to  be  abundant  in  almost  all  tropical  or  subtropical  countries. — Bentli. 

4.  It.  australis  (Australian),  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  267.  Slender  with 
trailing  or  twining  stems  as  in  R.  minima,  with  the  same  foliage  and  inflorescence, 
but  the  flowers  are  much  larger,  usually  nearly  5 lines  long,  bright  yellow,  without 
streaks  on  the  standard.  Calyx-lobes  all  narrow,  subulate-acuminate,  rather 
longer  than  the  tube,  the  2 upper  lobes  more  united  than  in  R.  minima.  Pod 
falcate,  acuminate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  above  fin.  long,  hirsute  with  long  hairs 
besides  the  minute  tomentum  of  R.  minima.  Seeds  not  strophiolate. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  Bidwill ; Rockhampton,  Thozet,  Dallachy,  Bowman. 

If  a variety  of  R.  minima,  this  is  yet  different  from  any  of  the  numerous  forms  assumed  in 
other  countries  by  that  ubiquitous  species,  approaching  in  some  respects  the  S.  African  R. 
yihba. — Bentli. 


66.  ERIOSEMA,  DC. 

(The  standard  woolly  or  silky-villous.) 

Calyx  2 upper  lobes  usually  free.  Standard  obovate  or  oblong,  with  indexed 
auricles  at  the  base,  rarely  callous  inside  ; keel  slightly  incurved,  obtuse  ; wings 
usually  longer,  narrow.  Upper  stamen  free,  the  others  united  ; anthers  uniform. 
Ovary  sessile,  with  2 ovules  ; style  filiform,  incurved  above  the  middle  and  some- 
times slightly  thickened.  Pod  flattened,  obliquely  orbicular  or  broadly  oblong, 
2-valved,  not  divided  inside.  Seeds  oblong,  oblique,  not  strophiolate,  the  funicle 
attached  to  one  end  of  a long  linear  hilum. — Herbs  or  undershrubs,  erect,  pros- 
trate or  rarely  twining,  tomentose  or  glabrous,  the  resinous  dots  less  conspicuous 
than  in  Rhynchosia.  Leaves  pinnately  3-foliolate  or  1-foliolate,  usually  without 
stipelhe.  Stipules  lanceolate,  free  or  united  opposite  the  leaf.  Flowers  usually 
yellow,  in  axillary  racemes  or  clusters,  the  standard  often  silky-villous.  Bracts 
very  deciduous  ; bracteoles  none. 

The  genus  is  numerous  in  S.  American  and  African  species,  with  a single  tropical  Asiatic  one 
which  is  the  same  as  the  only  Australian  one.  Formerly  considered  as  a section  of  Rhynchosia, 
it  differs  in  the  position  of  the  seeds  and  generally  in  habit. — Bentli. 

1.  3ES.  chinense  (Chinese),  Voy.  in  PL  Meyen.  31  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  268. 
“ Torakal,”  Palmer  River,  “ Pand-ja,”  Cooktown,  “ Kal-lar,”  Butcher’s  Hill, 
N.Q.,  “Nar-gul,”  Middle  Morehead  River,  Roth.  Rhizome  a perennial  oblong 
tuber.  Stems  erect,  £ to  1ft.  high,  simple  or  branching  at  the  base  only,  more  or 
less  hirsute  with  long  rust-coloured  hairs,  intermixed  with  a short  pubescence. 
Leaflets  solitary,  nearly  sessile,  from  oblong-lanceolate  to  linear,  1 to  2in.  long, 
sprinkled  with  a few  long  hairs  on  the  upper  surface  and  on  the  veins  of  the 
lower  one,  otherwise  glabrous  above,  hairy  or  glaucous  underneath.  Peduncles 
axillary,  exceedingly  short,  with  1,  2,  or  rarely  3 flowers,  about  4 lines  long. 
Bracts  small,  narrow.  Calyx  pubescent  or  villous,  the  lobes  either  shorter  than 
the  tube  or  with  long  subulate  points.  Pod  4 to  6 lines  long,  3 to  4 lines  broad, 
covered  with  long  rusty  hairs. — Pyrrhotrichia  tuberosa,  W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  i.  238  ; 
Rhynchosia  virgata,  Hamilt.  in  Wall.  Cat.  n.  5508. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander,  A.  Cunningham. 

The  species  is  frequent  in  the  hilly  districts  of  N.  India,  also  in  Ceylon,  Burmah,  the  Philip- 
pines, and  S.  China. — Benth. 

Roots  roasted,  skinned  before  eating;  localities  l.c. — Roth. 


442 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


67.  FLEMINGIA,  ltoxb. 

(After  John  Fleming.) 

Calyx-lobes  nearly  equal  or  the  lowest  longer.  Standard  oval  obovate  or 
orbicular,  with  indexed  auricles  at  the  base,  often  callous  inside  ; keel  incurved, 
obtuse  or  acute  ; wings  usually  rather  shorter.  Vexillary  stamen  free,  the  others 
united  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  short,  sessile  or  nearly  so,  with  2 ovules  ; style 
filiform,  incurved  above  the  middle  and  often  slightly  thickened  ; stigma  terminal. 
Pod  very  oblique,  short,  turgid,  2-valved.  Seeds  with  a short  hilum  without  any 
strophiole. — Herbs,  undershrubs  or  shrubs,  rarely  twining,  usually  tomentose  or 
pubescent  and  sprinkled  with  resinous  dots.  Leaves  digitately  3-foliolate  or  1- 
foliolate,  without  stipellte,  the  veins  of  the  leadets  very  prominent  underneath. 
Stipules  usually  dry,  striate,  deciduous.  Flowers  purple-reddish,  or  mixed  with 
yellow,  in  panicles  or  spike-likes  racemes.  Bracts  either  like  the  stipules  or,  in 
species  not  Australian,  large,  leafy,  concave,  enclosing  the  dowers.  Bracteoles 
none. 

The  genus  is  most  numerous  in  tropical  Asia,  with  one  or  two  African  species.  Of  the 
Australian  species,  2 are  common  to  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  the  other  2 are  endemic. 
The  species  with  large  leafy  bracts  forming  the  section  Ustry odium , DC.,  common  in  the 
Archipelago,  have  not  yet  been  found  in  Australia.  The  habit  and  foliage  of  the  genus  are 
almost  those  of  some  Genistew,  from  which  tribe,  however,  it  is  readily  distinguished  i>y  the  free 
upper  stamen.  Several  species  also  resemble  some  Psoralens,  but  the  ovary  and  pod  are  quite 


different. — Bentli. 

Flowers  in  small  loose  panicles 1.  F.  lineata. 

Flowers  2 or  3 on  a short  axillary  peduncle 2.  F.  pauciflora. 

Flowers  in  axillary  oblong  spike  like  racemes 3.  F.  parvifiora. 

Flowers  in  dense  globular  sessile  heads 4.  F.  involucrata. 


1.  F.  lineata  (lined),  Roxb.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  851  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  268. 
An  erect  undershrub  or  low  shrub  with  slender  branches,  the  young  parts  and 
indorescence  minutely  rusty-tomentose,  the  foliage  at  length  nearly  glabrous. 
Leadets  3,  from  obovate-cuneate  to  elliptical-oblong  or  broadly  lanceolate,  obtuse 
or  acute,  14  to  3in.  long.  Stipules  and  bracts  small,  usually  persistent.  Flowers 
small,  secund  and  loosely  racemose  along  the  branches  of  small  irregular  axillary 
or  terminal  panicles.  Calyx  minutely  tomentose,  about  3 lines  long,  the  lobes 
much  falcate,  longer  than  the  tube.  Standard  broad,  scarcely  exceeding  the 
calyx  ; keel  at  least  as  long,  much  curved,  acute  ; wings  rather  shorter.  Pod 
very  oblique,  about  4 to  6 lines  long  and  3 lines  broad. — Wight,  Ic.  t.  327. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Rockhampton,  Thozet ; Burdekin  River  and  Denison 
Creek,  Bowman;  Port  Denison  and  Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallacliy. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago. — Bentli. 

2.  r.  pauciflora  (few-dowered),  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  269.  A low  perennial 
or  undershrub,  with  the  habit  of  F.  parvifiora,  but  softly  silky-pubescent  or 
villous  all  over.  Leadets  3,  from  obovate  to  elliptical-oblong,  obtuse  or  softly 
mueronate,  1 to  2in.  long.  Stipules  narrow,  acuminate,  often  persistent. 
Flowers  small,  2 or  3 together,  almost  sessile,  on  short  axillary  peduncles. 
Bracts  narrow,  silky,  persistent.  Calyx  silky,  the  tube  very  short,  the  lobes 
narrow,  acuminate,  often  3 lines  long.  Petals  shorter  than  the  calyx-lobes. 
Standard  rather  broad ; keel  obtuse.  Pod  very  oblique,  as  broad  as  long, 
attaining  nearly  ^in. 

Hab.:  Victoria  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Landsborouyh. 

3.  F.  parvifiora  (small-dowered),  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  269.  A low  peren- 
nial or  undershrub,  with  rather  slender  prostrate  or  ascending  stems,  rarely 
exceeding  1ft.,  loosely  pubescent,  almost  silky  when  young.  Leadets  3,  from 
obovate-cuneate  and  1 to  14in.  long  to  ovate-lanceolate  and  3 to  4in.  long,  usually 
very  rugose.  Stipules  very  deciduous.  Flowers  small,  pink,  in  short  dense 


Fleming  ia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSflE. 


443 


spike  like  racemes  sessile  in  the  axils.  Bracts  lanceolate,  silky-hairy,  very 
deciduous.  Calyx  silky-pubescent,  about  2 lines  long,  the  upper  lobe  rather 
longer  than  the  tube,  the  lowest  still  longer.  Petals  shortly  exceeding  the  calyx  ; 
standard  ovate,  obtuse  ; keel  nearly  straight,  obtuse.  Pod  4 to  5 lines  long,  not 
3 lines  broad. 

Hab.:  Shoal  Bay  Passage,  R.  Brown  ; Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  Burdekin  River,  Bowman  ; 
Port  Denison,  Dallachy ; Lynedoch  Valley,  Leichhardt.  Flowering  in  June. 

Nearly  allied  to  the  E.  Indian  F.  prostrata , Roxb.,  but  in  the  latter  species  the  flowers  are 
considerably  larger,  although  the  petals  are  shorter  than  the  calyx. — Benth. 

4.  r.  involucrata  (bearing  an  involucre),  Benth.  in  PI.  Jungli.  i.  246,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  269.  An  erect  stout  perennial  or  undershrub  of  2 to  4ft.,  more  or 
less  villous  with  soft  spreading  hairs.  Leaflets  3,  ovate,  rather  acute,  2 to  3in. 
long.  Stipules  lanceolate,  very  deciduous.  Flowers  in  dense  globose  heads  of 
lin.  diameter  or  rather  more,  sessile  or  very  shortly  pedunculate  in  the  upper 
axils  and  at  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Outer  bracts  ovate-lanceolate,  striate, 
pubescent,  forming  an  involucre  round  the  head  ; inner  ones  much  narrower. 
Calyx  covered  with  long  soft  hairs,  the  upper  lobes  about  4 lines,  the  lower  nearly 
6 lines  long  and  much  broader  than  the  others.  Standard  rather  shorter  than 
the  calyx-lobes,  obovate ; keel  scarcely  shorter,  almost  acute.  Pod  enclosed  in 
the  calyx,  scarcely  3 lines  long,  usually  1-seeded  by  abortion. — F.  capitata,  Zoll.; 
Miq.  FI.  Ind.  Bat.  i.  part  1,  166. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  R.  Brown.  Also  in  N.E.  India  and  in  Java.  — Benth. 


68.  DALBERGIA,  Linn. 

(After  Nicholas  Dalberg.) 

Calyx-teeth  short,  the  lowest  rather  longer.  Standard  obovate  or  orbicular  ; 
keel  obtuse.  Stamens  all  united  in  a sheath  open  on  the  upper  side,  or  in  2 
equal  bundles,  or  reduced  to  9,  the  upper  one  deficient  ; anthers  small,  erect, 
didymous,  opening  at  the  top.  Ovary  stipitate,  with  1 or  few  ovules ; style 
incurved,  with  a terminal  stigma.  Pod  thin  and  flat,  oblong,  linear  or  rarely 
falcate,  indehiscent,  the  margins  neither  thickened  nor  winged.  Seeds  single  or 
few  and  distant  along  the  centre  of  the  pod,  very  flat  and  reniform. — Trees  or 
woody  climbers.  Leaves  pinnate,  without  stipellas,  the  leaflets  usually  alternate. 
Flowers  small,  usually  numerous  in  axillary  or  terminal  dichotomous  cymes  or 
irregular  panicles.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  usually  minute. 

A large  genus,  dispersed  over  the  tropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World.  The  only 
Australian  species  has  also  been  found  in  New  Guinea. 

1.  D.  densa  (flowers  dense),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  ii.  217,  and  P'l. 
Austr.  ii.  271.  A small  tree,  with  the  branches  sometimes  weak  or  climbing. 
Leaflets  7 to  15,  broadly  oblong  or  oval-elliptical,  very  obtuse,  f to  l^in.  long, 
glabrous  above,  minutely  pubescent  underneath.  Panicles  or  clusters  of  racemes, 
under  2in.  long,  not  much  branched.  Flowers  scarcely  above  2 lines  long.  Calyx 
nearly  glabrous,  about  1 line  long,  the  teeth  very  short  and  broad.  Claws  of  the 
petals  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Ovary  glabrous  ; style  rather  slender.  Pod  very 
thin,  obtuse,  H to  nearly  3in.  long,  about  £in.  wide,  slightly  reticulate  along  the 
centre,  on  a stipes  of  about  2 lines. 

Hab.:  Prince  of  Wales  Islands,  R.  Brown ; Albany  Island,  IV.  Hill.  Also  in  New  Guinea. 

The  Australian  specimens  have  rather  more  leaflets  than  the  New  Guinea  ones,  but  do  not 
otherwise  differ.  The  species  is  allied  to  the  common  D.  tamarindi  folia,  Roxb.,  from  E.  India 
and  the  Archipelago,  and  has  the  same  pod,  but  much  larger,  broader  and  fewer  leaflets  and 
smaller  flowers. — Benth. 

Wood  of  a light  colour,  grain  close. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  118a. 


444 


XLiiJL.  LEGUMINOS^l. 


69.  LONCHOCARPUS,  H.  B.  and  K. 

(Pods  lance-shaped.) 

Calyx  truncate  or  very  broadly  and  shortly  toothed.  Standard  orbicular, 
obovate  or  rarely  oblong  ; wings  usually  slightly  adhering  to  the  keel ; keel  nearly 
straight  or  incurved,  obtuse.  Upper  stamen  free  at  the  base,  connate  with  the 
others  in  the  middle  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  with  2 or  more  ovules  ; style 
incurved,  stigma  small,  terminal.  Pod  very  flat,  oblong  or  broadly  linear,  thin  or 
rather  thick  and  coriaceous,  indehiscent,  the  upper  or  both  margins  sometimes 
thickened  or  bordered  by  a prominent  nerve,  but  not  winged.  Seeds  usually  1 or 
2,  rarely  more,  flat,  reniform  or  orbicular. — Trees  or  woody  climbers.  Leaves 
pinnate ; leaflets  usually  few,  opposite,  with  a terminal  odd  one  ; stipellas  none  or 
small  and  setaceous.  Stipules  small  or  none.  Racemes  or  raceme-like  panicles 
axillary  or  forming  large  terminal  panicles.  Flowers  violet,  purple,  or  white, 
usually  in  pairs  or  in  clusters  along  the  rhachis.  Bracts  small,  deciduous ; 
bracteoles  also  small,  but  often  more  persistent. 

A numerous  genus  in  S.  America  and  tropical  Africa,  but  as  yet  unknown  in  Asia.  The  only 
Australian  species  is  endemic,  coming,  however,  very  near  to  some  African  paniculate  species, 
generically  distinguished  by  Fenzl  under  the  name  of  Philenoptera , and  by  Klotzsch  under  that 
of  Capassa.  In  flower,  Lonchocarpus  cannot  always  be  distinguished  from  Millettia , but  the  pod 
is  always  thinner  and  indehiscent,  the  pod  alone  distinguishing  the  genus  from  Derris  and 
Pongamia. — Benth. 

1.  I«.  Blackii  (after  Allan  Black),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  271.  A tall  woody 
climber,  the  young  branches  and  foliage  rusty  pubescent,  at  length  glabrous. 
Leaflets  7 to  11,  ovate,  shortly  and  obtusely  acuminate,  1 to  1£  or  rarely  above 
2iu.  long,  on  rather  long  petiolules,  with  small  setaceous  stipellae.  Flowers  dark 
purplo,  in  long  loose  racemes,  forming  large  terminal  panicles,  the  pedicels 
usually  2 together  on  a short  common  peduncle.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long, 
slightly  silky-pubescent,  with  short  broad  teeth.  Standard  about  4 lines  broad, 
narrowed  into  a long  claw  ; keel  nearly  as  long,  obliquely  ovate  ; wings  very 
small.  Ovary  very  villous,  with  numerous  ovules ; style  short,  inflexed.  Pod 
very  thin,  2 to  5in.  long,  ^ to  fin.  broad,  with  2 to  4 or  5 broad  flat  reniform 
seeds. — Millettin  Blackii,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  123. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller , W.  Hill,  Leichhardt;  Ipswich,  Nernst  ; 
Broadsound  and  Bowen  River,  Bowman ; Rockhampton,  Dallachy.  Flowers  about  November. 

Wood  very  stringy,  dark-brown,  and  porous. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  119. 

Yields  a blood-red  juice,  which,  on  exposure  to  air,  dries  up  to  a brownish  gum.  Analysis  : 
Arabin,  3'8  ; resin,  1-4;  tannic  acid,  74-2  ; water,  20  6. — Lauterer. 


70.  DERRIS,  Lour. 

(Pods  thin,  skin-like.) 

(Brachypterum,  W.  and  Am.) 

Calyx  truncate  or  very  shortly  and  broadly  toothed.  Standard  obovate  or 
orbicular  ; keel  slightly  incurved.  Upper  stamen  usually  free  at  the  base,  united 
with  the  others  in  the  middle ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  sessile  or  shortly 
stipitate,  with  several  ovules  ; style  incurved,  with  a small  terminal  stigma.  Pod 
flat,  oblong  or  linear,  straight  or  slightly  incurved,  thin  or  coriaceous,  indehiscent, 
the  upper  or  both  sutures  bordered  by  a narrow  wing.  Seeds  1,  2 or  rarely  3, 
very  flat,  orbicular  or  reniform. — Tall  woody  climbers  or  rarely  trees.  Leaves 
pinnate  ; leaflets  opposite,  with  a terminal  odd  one  ; stipellas  small  and  setaceous 
or  none.  Stipules  small  or  none.  Flowers  white,  yellowish  or  rarely  violet, 
usually  clustered  on  lateral  nodes  along  the  rhachis  of  axillary  racemes.  Bracts 
and  bracteoles  small  and  deciduous. 


Denis.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


445 


A tropical  genus,  comprising  a considerable  number  of  Asiatic  species  with  three  S.  American 
ones,  one  only  of  the  Asiatic  species  extending  into  Africa.  Of  the  Queensland  species  two  are 
common  Indian  ones,  the  other  endemic.  The  genus  differs  from  Lonchocarpus  and  Pongamia 


chiefly  in  the  winged  fruit. — Benth.  (in  part). 

Leaflets  9 to  13,  usually  obtuse.  Racemes  long  and  slender.  Pod  lanceolate, 

narrowed  at  both  ends 1.  II.  scandals. 

Leaflets  3 to  7,  usually  acuminate.  Racemes  rather  short  and  crowded. 

Pod  short  and  broad,  obliquely  rounded  at  both  ends 2.  D.  uliginosa. 

Leaflets  usually  7,  large,  the  veins  bearing  ferruginous  hairs.  Racemes, 

panicles  10  to  18in.  long.  Pod  under  2in.  long,  £in.  broad,  1-seeded  . . 3.  D.  koolgibberah. 


1.  S.  scandens  (climbing),  Bentli.  Sgn.  Dalb.  103,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  272. 
A tall  woody  climber,  sometime?  rusty-pubescent  or  almost  villous  at  first, 
nearly  glabrous  when  full  grown.  Leaflets  9 to  13,  broadly  oblong,  obtuse, 
retuse  or  shortly  and  obtusely  acuminate,  1 to  2in.  long.  Racemes 
rather  slender,  from  4 or  5in.  to  nearly  1ft.  long.  Flowers  about  5 lines 
long,  in  clusters  of  3 to  6,  the  pedicels  filiform.  Pod  either  1-seeded  and  about 
l|in.  long,  or  when  several- seeded  attaining  3in.  or  more,  5 to  6 lines  broad, 
glabrous  or  minutely  pubescent,  acute  at  both  ends,  very  thin,  with  a narrow 
wing  along  the  upper  suture. — Dalben/ia  scandens,  Roxb.  PL  Corom.  t.  192  ; 
Wight,  Ic.  t.  275. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  Bid w ill ; Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller,  C.  Stuart ; Ipswich, 
Nernst. 

Common  in  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago. 

2.  D.  uliginosa  (growing  in  swamps),  Benth.  in  PI.  Junrjh.  i.  252,  Syn.  Dalb. 

107,  and  FI.  Austr.  272.  “ Mo-kor-ja,”  Cooktown,  Both.  A tall  woody  climber, 

glabrous  in  all  its  parts.  Leaflets  in  the  common  variety,  5 or  7,  ovate  or  oval- 
oblong,  li  to  3in.  long,  shortly  and  obtusely  acuminate,  somewhat  coriaceous 
and  shining.  Axillary  racemes  1 to  3in.  long,  the  terminal  one  longer.  Flowers 
4 to  5 lines  long,  on  short  pedicels,  the  clusters  rather  crowded.  Standard 
broadly  ovate ; wings  and  keel  scarcely  shorter,  but  narrow-oblong.  Ovules 
usually  4 to  6,  all  in  the  lower  part  of  the  ovary.  Pod  very  flat  and  thin,  1 to 
14in.  long,  very  obtuse  at  both  ends  so  as  to  become  nearer  square  than  round, 
but  very  oblique,  sometimes  as  broad  as  long,  but  in  some  varieties  narrower. 
Seeds  1 or  2. — Ponrjamia  uliginosa,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  416. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown  ; Cape  York,  W.  Hill. 

Common  in  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  extending  from  S.E.  Africa  to  S.  China.  —Benth. 


3.  D.  koolgibberah  (aboriginal  name  of  Mulgrave  River),  Bail.  Rep. 
Bellenden-Ker  Exped.  1889.  A woody  climber,  attaining  a considerable  height, 
densely  covered  by  soft  ferruginous  hairs,  particularly  on  the  branches  and 
inflorescence.  Leaflets  usually  7,  broadly  oblong,  3 to  5in.  long,  2 to  Bin.  broad, 
rounded  at  the  base  to  a petiolule  of  about  2 lines,  very  obtuse  or  slightly 
apiculate  at  the  point,  the  terminal  leaflet  larger,  the  6 or  .3  primary  veins  on 
each  side  of  the  midrib  and  the  cross-veins  usually  prominent,  midrib  and 
primary  veins  with  rusty  hairs  on  both  sides,  upper  surface  somewhat  glossy, 
under  surface  with  a pale  soft  pubescence.  Inflorescence  in  narrow  panicles  10 
to  18in.  long,  the  side  branches  very  numerous,  about  Bin.  long,  the  upper  half 
densely  covered  by  the  flower.  Pedicels  very  short,  bracteoles  close  under  the 
calyx.  Flowers  singly,  not  in  pairs  or  clusters  but  very  close  together,  slightly 
rosy.  Calyx  campanulate,  dark,  velvety,  with  obscure  teeth,  14  line  deep. 
Standard  orbicular,  with  small  indexed  auricles  at  the  base  on  a very  short  claw, 
rcbout  4 lines  diameter,  velvety  on  the  back  ; wings  slightly  shorter  and  more  or 
less  adhering  to  and  incurved  with  the  keel,  and  densely  velvety.  Upper  stamen 
shortly  free  at  the  base,  united  with  the  other  in  the  middle.  Pod  densely 


446 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS.E. 


[I)  err  is. 


clothed  with  rusty-brown  hairs  under  2in.  long  and  about  Un.  wide,  somewhat 
pointed  at  each  end,  prominently  winged  along  the  upper  suture,  1 -seeded,  but 
only  immature  pods  seen. 

Hab.:  Border  of  scrubs  along  the  Mulgrave  River. 

In  some  respects  this  Queensland  plant  approaches  D.  ferruginca,  Benth.,  of  E.  India. 


71.  PONGAMIA,  Vent. 

(From  its  Indian  name.) 

Calyx  truncate.  Standard  orbicular,  with  indexed  auricles  at  the  base  ; keel 
slightly  incurved,  obtuse.  Upper  stamen  free  at  the  base,  connate  with  the 
others  in  a tube  in  the  middle ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  nearly  sessile,  with  2 
ovules  ; style  incurved,  stigma  small,  terminal.  Pod  broadly  and  obliquely 

oblong  or  slightly  falcate,  thick  but  flat,  1 -seeded,  indehiscent,  the  sutures  obtuse, 
without  wings.  Seed  reniform. — Tree.  Leaves  pinnate,  without  stipell®. 

Flowers  in  axillary  racemes.  Bracts  very  deciduous  ; bracteoles  minute  or  none. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species  widely  diffused  over  tropical  Asia. 

1.  P.  glabra  (without  hairs),  Vent.  Jard.  Malm,,  t.  28  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
273.  Karum  Oil  tree  or  Poonga  Oil  tree.  Glabrous  except  a very  slight 
pubescence  on  the  inflorescence.  Leaflets  5 or  7,  ovate,  shortly  and  obtusely 
acuminate,  usually  broad,  about  3in.  long,  on  a rather  long  petiole,  but  variable 
in  size.  Racemes  loose,  about  3 to  5in.  long.  Flowers  in  pairs,  the  pedicels  2 to 
4 lines  long.  Standard  about  ^in.  diameter,  lower  petals  shorter.  Pod  usually 
1J  to  2in.  long  and  about  lin.  broad,  sessile  or  nearly  so,  often  somewhat  falcate 
or  with  a very  short  incurved  point. — Benth.  Syn.  Dalb.  117. 

Hab.:  Cape  York  and  Fitzroy  Island,  M‘Gillivray ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan  ; Edgecombe  Bay, 
Dallachy. 

Var.  minor.  Leaflets  small  and  narrow. — Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Leichhardt ; Cape  Grafton,  A. 
Cunningham  ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan. 

The  species  occurs  throughout  southern  India  on  the  coast  and  plains  to  the  foot  of  the  hills, 
and  is  abundant  in  the  Archipelago. — Benth. 

Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft  found  all  parts  of  the  plant  to  contain  a principle  of  considerable  activity  as 
an  emetic. 

Stems  used  for  poisoning  water  for  fish. — Roth. 

Wood  yellow,  close-grained,  tough,  and  prettily  marked.  Might  be  used  for  chair-making,  but 
readily  attacked  by  insects. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  120. 


72.  SOPHORA,  Linn. 

(From  its  Arabic  name.) 

Calyx-teeth  very  short.  Standard  broad,  erect  or  reflexed ; wings  oblong, 
erect,  free  ; keel-petals  like  the  wingr;  or  rather  larger,  overlapping  each  other  at 
the  back,  but  scarcely  united.  Stamens  10,  free,  or  9 of  them  slightly  connected 
in  a ring  at  the  base  ; anthers  uniform.  Ovary  shortly  stipitate,  with  several 
ovules  ; style  incurved,  with  a minute  terminal  stigma.  Pod  moniliform,  fleshy, 
coriaceous  or  woody,  indehiscent  or  opening  at  length  in  2 valves,  each  seed 
enclosed  in  a separate  cell.  Seeds  globular,  oblong  or  flattened ; cotyledons 
fleshy  ; radicle  very  short  and  straight  or  more  or  less  elongated  and  indexed. — 
Trees,  shrubs  or  rarely  undershrubs.  Leaves  unequally  pinnate,  without  stipellae 
or  with  very  small  setaceous  ones.  Stipules  small.  Mowers  white,  yellow  or 
rarely  violet-blue,  in  racemes  either  simple  and  terminal  or  forming  large  terminal 
panicles.  Bracts  small,  deciduous  ; bracteoles  usually  none. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World,  extending  also 
into  New  Zealand  and  S.  Chili,  where  it  assumes  the  form  distinguished  by  some  as  a genus 


Sophora.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


447 


under  the  name  of  Edicardsia,  with  a shorter  standard  and  exserted  stamens.  The  two 
Australian  species  belong  to  the  true  Sophoras,  with  a larger  standard  and  the  stamens  enclosed 
in  the  keel.  One  is  a common  tropical  seacoast  tree  or  shrub,  the  other  is  endemic. — Benth. 

Hoary.  Leaflets  under  18,  broadly  ovate  or  orbicular,  rather  thick  . . . . 1.  S.  tomentosa. 

Softly  pubescent.  Leaflets  above  20,  oval-oblong,  thin 2.  S.  Fraseri. 

1.  S.  tomentosa  (cottony),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  95;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
274.  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree,  hoary  all  over  with  a minute  close  tomentum. 
Leaflets  11  to  17,  broadly  ovate  or  orbicular,  very  obtuse  or  retuse,  about  lin. 
long  or  rather  more,  rather  thick  and  sometimes  almost  silky,  rarely  becoming 
glabrous.  Flowers  pale  yellow,  in  loose  simple  terminal  racemes  ; pedicels  as 
long  as  the  calyx.  Calyx  very  broad,  about  3 lines  long,  truncate  with  scarcely 
prominent  teeth.  Standard  broad,  9 to  10  lines  diameter,  spreading  or  reflexed 
above  the  middle  ; wings  and  keel  rather  shorter,  covering  the  stamens.  Pod 
indehiscent,  much  contracted  between  the  seeds,  appearing  to  consist  of  5 to  10 
nearly  globular  articles,  each  enclosing  a globular  seed  with  a hard  shining  testa  ; 
radicle  scarcely  prominent  and  straight. — Benth.  in  Mart.  FI.  Bras.  Pap.  314,  t. 
124,  with  the  synonymy  there  cited. 

Hab.:  Keppel  Bay,  Broadsound,  &c.,  Ii.  Brown;  on  the  seacoast  and  adjoining  islands,  from 
the  Brisbane  to  the  Burdekin,  F.  v.  Mueller,  M'Gillivray,  Fitzalan,  Henne,  and  others. 

2.  S.  Fraseri  (after  Chas.  Fraser),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  274.  An  erect 
shrub  of  4 to  6ft.,  the  branches  softly  pubescent  or  tomentose,  more  slender  than 
in  8.  tomentosa.  Leaflets  21  to  31,  oblong  or  rarely  oval,  obtuse  or  retuse,  from 
under  fin.  to  about  fin.  long,  rather  thin,  pubescent.  Flowers  rather  smaller 
than  in  S.  tomentosa,  in  similar  loose  terminal  simple  racemes.  Calyx  broad,  2 
to  2f  lines  long  ; the  teeth  prominent  though  very  short  and  broad.  Petals  and 
stamens  of  S.  tomentosa,  except  that  9 of  the  stamens  appear  to  be  very  shortly 
connected  in  a ring  at  the  base.  Pod  tomentose,  much  less  contracted  between 
the  seeds  than  in  S.  tomentosa,  the  articles  more  oblong.  Seeds  ovoid-oblong, 
shining  ; radicle  prominent  and  slightly  incurved. — Calpurnia  lasioyyna,  F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  v.  31. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  Fraser;  Murrum-Murrum  Creek,  Leichhardt;  Pine  River,  Fitzalan; 
Ipswich,  Nernst. 

73.  PODOPETALUM,  F.  v.  M. 

(Alluding  to  the  long  claws  of  petals.) 

Calyx  with  5 short  deltoid  teeth  of  equal  length,  the  2 upper  ones  approximate, 
all  slightly  overlapping  in  the  bud.  Petals  all  free,  the  upper  renate  bulging  towards 
the  middle,  tapering  into  a moderately  long  claw,  the  4 other  petals  rather  longer 
than  the  upper  one,  spathular  or  orbicular,  obovate,  almost  equilateral, 
attenuated  into  a long  claw.  Stamens  10,  free.  Anthers  oblong.  Disk  adnate, 
half  the  height  of  the  calyx-tube,  10-furrowed.  Style  filiform  at  first,  involute. 
Stigma  terminal,  very  minute.  Ovary  long,  stipitate,  narrow,  without  partitions 
inside.  Ovules  6 or  7.  Pod  stipitate,  3 or  4in.  long.  Leaves  impari-pinnate ; 
leaflets  large,  lanceolate,  fin.  broad,  veined.  Seeds  red.  Stipules  deciduous  or 
obliterated  ; stipelles  none.  Flowers  pink,  in  racemose  panicles.  Bracts  minute, 
deltoid,  persistent ; bracteoles  rudimentary. — F.  v.  M.  Melb.  Chemist  and 
Druggist,  June  1882. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species,  endemic  in  Queensland.  Readily  separated  from 
Castanospermum  by  its  terminal  inflorescence,  by  the  not  almost  toothless  calyx,  and  by  the 
petals  not  being  extremely  short-clawed.  From  Sophora  it  differs  in  its  longer  clawed  petals, 
none  of  which  are  dimidiated  or  auriculated. — F.  v.  M.,  l.c. 

1.  P.  Ormondi  (after  Hon.  Francis  Ormond),  F.  v.M.  l.c.  “ Belgo-belgo  ” 
of  Barron  River  natives,  E.  Cowley.  A small  tree,  branches,  often  rough  with 
lenticelp,  somewhat  flattened.  Leaves  opposite  or  sub-opposite,  impari-pinnate  ; 


448 


XL11I.  LEGtJMINOSiE. 


[Podopetalum. 


leaflets  coriaceous  on  the  flowering  branchlets,  5 to  7,  about  3in.  long  and  ljin. 
broad,  tapering  to  short  petiolules.  Inflorescence  at  the  ends  of  the  branchlets, 
sometimes  forming  broad  panicles.  Calyx  coriaceous,  persistent  under  the  pod. 
Pod  stipitate,  3 or  4in.  long,  fin.  broad;  sides  with  a few  prominent  veins, 
slightly  constricted  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  from  1 to  4,  oblong,  red,  5 lines 
long,  with  a small  hilum. 

Hab.:  On  the  borders  of  rivers  in  tropical  Queensland. 

74.  CASTANOSPERMUM,  A.  Cunn. 

(Chestnut-seeded.) 

Calyx-teeth  very  short  and  broad.  Standard  obovate-orbicular,  recurved, 
narrowed  into  a claw  ; wings  and  keel-petals  shorter  than  the  standard,  all  free 
and  nearly  similar,  erect,  oblong.  Stamens  10,  all  free ; anthers  linear,  versatile. 
Ovary  on  a long  stipes,  with  several  ovules,  tapering  into  an  incurved  style  ; 
stigma  small,  terminal.  Pod  large,  coriaceous,  almost  woody,  turgid,  2-valved, 
spongy  inside.  Seeds  large,  nearly  globular ; cotyledons  thick  ; radicle  scarcely 
prominent,  straight. — Tree.  Leaves  large,  unequally  pinnate.  Flowers  large, 
yellow,  in  loose  axillary  or  lateral  racemes.  Bracts  small ; bracteoles  none. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species  endemic  in  Australia. 

1.  C.  australe  (Australian),  A.  Cunn.  in  Hook.  Bot.  Misc.  i.  241,  t.  51,  52  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  275.  Moreton  Bay  Chestnut  or  Bean  Tree.  “ Mi,” 
Brisbane,  T.  Petrie-,  “ Ivo-par,”  Cooktown,  Both.-,  “Ivoonmurri,”  Bundaberg, 
Keys  ; “ Wac-kay,”  Barron  River,  J.  F.  Bailey.  A tall  glabrous  tree.  Leaves 
1 to  14ft.  long;  leaflets  11  to  15,  ovate-elliptical  or  broadly  oblong,  shortly 
acuminate,  3 to  5in.  long,  shortly  petiolulate.  Racemes  2 or  3 or  to  5 
or  Gin.  long,  nearly  or  quite  sessile,  usually  on  the  old  leafless  wood.  Pedicels 
1 to  14in.  long.  Calyx  coriaceous,  campanulate,  J to  fin.  long,  lobes  5, 
short  and  broad,  the  2 upper  ones  more  widely  separated  and  shorter  than 
the  others,  all  incurved.  Standard  obovate,  prominently  emarginate  or  2-lobed, 
tapering  to  a rather  broad  claw,  1 to  14in.  long.,  and  when  fully  expanded  lin. 
broad,  wings  and  keel  petals  imbricate,  erect,  fin.  longer  than  the  calyx-tube, 
oblong,  all  the  petals  thick-coriaceous,  changing  from  a greenish-yellow  to  a deep 
orange.  Stamens  10,  all  free,  incurved,  the  longer  ones  lfin.  Anthers  linear, 
versatile,  2 lines  long.  Ovary  on  a long  stipes,  with  several  ovules,  tapering  into 
an  incurved  style.  Stigma  minute.  Pod  8 or  9in.  long,  about  2in.  broad, 
slightly  falcate,  almost  terete,  the  valves  hard  and  thick,  the  spongy  substance 
inside  dividing  it  into  3 to  5 cells,  each  containing  a large  chestnut-like  seed. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander  ; Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham , 
F.  v.  Mueller ; Pine  River,  Fitzalan  ; also  in  the  scrubs  of  tropical  Queensland.  Flowering  in 
November. 

Var.  brevivexillum.  This  variety  differs  from  the  normal  form  in  that  its  flowers  are  smaller 
and  qf  a canary-yellow,  and  the  standard  shorter  than  the  wings  and  keel-petals,  of  nearly  the 
form  of  these,  and  hut  slightly  recurved.  Stamens  nearly  straight. 

A plate  showing  the  above  forms  is  given  in  Ql.  Agri.  Journ.  vol.  i.,  part  6. 

The  beans  of  this  tree  are  eaten  by  marsupials,  and  in  limes  of  scarcity  of  food  by  the 
Australian  blacks,  after  preparation  by  soaking  in  water,  pounding,  and  baking.  A small  piece 
of  the  bean  if  eaten  causes  severe  diarrhoea,  with  intense  griping  ; it  does  this  whether  it  has 
been  previously  soaked  in  water  or  even  roasted.  No  poisonous  substance  is  removed  by  water. 
No  parts  of  the  plant  are  bitter.  The  purgative  property  of  the  bean  is  probably  due  to  its 
indigestibility. — T.  L.  Bancroft. 

This  tree  exudes  a light-brown  gum,  which  contains  15-4%  of  arabin,  64-4%  of  metarabin,  and 
traces  of  a yellow  colouring  matter. — Lauterer. 

The  bli"ht  fungi  Asterina  platystoma,  Cke.  and  Mass.,  and  Myriocephalum  castanospermi,  Cke. 
and  Mass.,  often  injure  the  leaflets  of  this  tree. 

Wood  with  usually  a large  quantity  of  dark-coloured  heartwood,  prized  by  cabinetmakers  and 
turners  • the  outer  wood  of  a yellow  colour.  The  wood  shrinks  very  much  in  drying.  The 
foliage  is  thought  to  he  deleterious  to  stock  should  they  browse  on  it  in  times  of  drought. — 
Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  122. 


XLIII.  LEGUMLNOSiE. 


449 


75.  BARKLYA,  F.  v.  M. 

(After  H.  Barkly,  a Governor  of  Victoria.) 

Calyx-teeth  very  short  and  obtuse.  Petals  all  free,  obovate,  erect,  similar  and 
nearly  equal,  on  long  claws,  the  upper  outer  one  or  standard  rather  broader  than 
the  others.  Stamens  10,  all  free,  longer  than  the  petals ; anthers  sagittate. 
Ovary  stipitate,  with  several  ovules,  tapering  into  a short  style  with  a minute 
terminal  stigma.  Pod  stipitate,  flat,  the  valves  thin  and  scarcely  separating. 
Seeds  flat,  albuminous  ; cotyledons  obovate,  flat ; radicle  indexed. —Tree.  Leaves 
simple  (unifoliolate),  petiolate.  Flowers  small,  yellow,  in  dense  racemes.  Bracts 
very  small ; bracteoles  none. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species,  endemic  in  Australia,  approaching  in  habit  and  in  the 
small  regular  flowers  to  some  Ccesalpiniece  allied  to  Bauhiuia , but  with  the  floral  aestivation  and 
the  embryo  of  Papilionacecc. — Benth. 

1.  B.  syringifolia  (Lilac-leaved),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  158,  and 
Fragm.  i,  109,  t.  3 ; Benth.  FI.  Aastr.  ii.  275.  A handsome  tree,  attaining  from 
20  to  60ft.,  glabrous,  or  the  young  shoots  and  inflorescence  rusty-tomentose. 
Leaves  very  broadly  cordate, ( shortly  acuminate,  2,  3,  or  even  4in.  long,  and  often 
as  broad  as  long,  entire,  5 to  7-nerved,  on  a petiole  of  1 to  2in.,  slightly 
thickened  at  the  base  and  at  the  top.  Stipules  small,  ovate,  deciduous.  Flowers 
of  a bright  golden  yellow,  in  dense  racemes  of  6 to  9in.,  forming  handsome 
terminal  panicles.  Pedicels  short.  Calyx  about  2 lines  long.  Petal-claws  rather 
longer  than  the  calyx,  the  lamina  about  as  long.  Ovary  glabrous,  with  3 or  4 
ovules.  Pod  oblong-lanceolate,  oblique  or  slightly  falcate,  1J  to  2in.  long  and 
about  Jin.  broad,  narrowed  at  the  base,  with  1 or  2 seeds. 

Hab.:  Near  Brisbane,  W.  Hill,  Fitzalan ; ltockhampton,  Dallachy ; Wide  Bay,  Leichhardt. 

Var.  tortuosa.  Is  a stunted  form  with  zigzag  branches,  reminding  of  Robinia  Pseudo-acacia 
var.  tortuosa.  It  was  raised  from  seed  by  Mr.  A.  J.  Hockings. 

Wood  blackish-grey,  close  in  grain,  very  tough  ; suitable  for  tool-handles. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql. 
Woods  No.  123. 


Suborder  II.  C^SALPINIEflE. 

Flowers  usually  5-merous,  very  rarely  4-merous  or  3-merous,  the  sepals  united 
at  the  base  into  a short  tube,  lined  by  the  disk,  bearing  at  its  margin  the  petals 
and  stamens,  rarely  forming  a eampanulate  or  tubular  calyx  with  the  stamens 
near  the  base,  as  in  Papilionacece,  the  free  part  of  the  sepals  or  lobes  of  the  calyx 
imbricate  or  rarely  valvate.  Corolla  irregular  or  nearly  regular,  either  with  the 
5 (or  4 or  3)  petals  variously  imbricate  in  the  bud,  but  the  upper  one  never 
outside  and  usually  quite  inside,  or  in  genera  not  Australian,  some  or  all  of  the 
four  lower  petals  wanting.  Stamens  10  or  fewer,  or  in  genera  not  Australian, 
indefinite,  free  or  rarely  more  or  less  united,  all  perfect  or  several  of  them  reduced 
to  staminodia.  Ovules  anatropous  or  nearly  so.  Radicle  of  the  embryo  short 
and  straight. 

The  tropical  genera  of  this  suborder  are  numerous,  and  have  been  distributed  into  several 
tribes,  but  these  are  not  sufficiently  marked  to  render  it  necessary  to  apply  them  to  the  few 
genera  found  in  Australia.  Barklya  amongst  Sophorece  has  the  regular  corolla  of  some 
Ccesalpiniece,  but  with  the  aestivation  of  Papilionacecc,  and  Erythrophlceum  amongst  Uimosecc  has 
the  imbricate  aestivation  of  Ccesalpiniece,  but  in  a very  slight  degree,  with  the  inflorescence 
haracteristic  of  Mimosece. — Benth. 


76.  CzESALPINIA,  Linn. 

(After  Dr.  Caesalpinus.) 

Sepals  5,  shortly  united  at  the  base,  much  imbricated,  the  lowest  one  larger 
and  concave.  Petals  5,  spreading,  rather  unequal,  the  upper  inner  one  the 
smallest,  the  two  lowest  outer  ones  the  largest.  Stamens  10,  free  ; anthers 
uniform,  ovate.  Ovary  with  2 or  more  ovules  ; style  subulate,  with  a small 


450 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[ CtBsalpinia . 


stigma.  Pod  flattened,  obliquely  ovate,  oblong  or  broadly  linear-falcate,  without 
prickles,  2-valved.  Seeds  thick  or  flattened,  with  a very  small  hilum  ; albumen 
none  ; radicle  short,  straight. — Shrubs,  trees  or  woody  climbers,  often  armed  with 
scattered  recurved  prickles.  Leaves  abruptly  bipinnate.  Flowers  yellow,  in 
racemes,  either  single  in  the  upper  axils  or  forming  terminal  panicles.  Filaments 
more  or  less  hairy  at  the  base. 

A considerable  genus,  spread  over  the  tropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World.  The 


Australian  species  are  both  of  them  common  Asiatic  ones. — Benth. 

Pubescent.  Pinnaj  4 to  6.  Leaflets  8 to  12  pairs,  oblong.  Pod  2 to  3in. 

long,  and  about  l^in.  broad.  Seeds  nearly  round 1.  C.  Bonducella. 

Glabrous.  Pinnse  2 to  4 pairs.  Leaflets  2 or  3 pairs,  ovate,  rather  acute. 

Pod  ovate,  1-seeded 2.  C.  nuga. 

Pubescent  or  tomentose.  Pinnae  6 to  8 pairs.  Leaflets  8 to  12  pairs,  oblong, 
very  obtuse.  Pod  oblong,  6 to  8-seeded 3.  C.  sepiaria. 


1.  C.  Bonducella  (from  Arabic  bondog,  a necklace),  lioxb.  FI.  hid.  ii.  357. 
A shrub  with  loose  spreading  or  climbing  branches,  pubescent  or  villous  in  all  its 
parts,  armed  wflth  numerous  scattered  hooked  prickles,  especially  on  the  petioles. 
Leaves  with  a common  petiole  of  1 to  l|ft.,  4 to  7 distant  pairs,  each  4 to  Gin. 
long;  leaflets  8 to  12  pairs,  oblong,  f to  lin.  long  or  rarely  twice  that  size. 
Stipules  lobed  and  leafy,  deciduous.  Racemes  4 to  Gin.  long,  simple  or 
branched  in  the  upper  axils.  Flowers  yellow,  shortly  pedicellate  and  crowded 
in  the  upper  part.  Bracts  with  a long  recurved  point.  Calyx  about  4 lines  long. 
Petals  scarcely  longer.  Pod  2 to  3in.  long,  about  liin.  broad.  Seeds  large, 
glabrous  or  ovoid,  of  a bluish-grey  or  lead  colour. — Guilandina  Bonducella, 
Linn.;  Benth.  in  FI.  Austr.  ii.  276. 

Hab.:  Tropical  coastal  scrubs. 

Widely  spread  and  often  very  common,  especially  near  the  sea,  in  tropical  Asia,  Africa,  and 
America.  It  is  usually  confounded  with  G.  Bonduc,  Linn.,  which  is  a much  rarer  plant, 
although  equally  found,  indigenous  or  introduced,  in  East  India,  in  the  Archipelago,  and  in  the 
West  Indies.  It  is  nearly  glabrous,  has  usually  larger  leaflets,  no  stipules;  the  bracts  are 
erect,  not  recurved,  and  the  seeds  are  said  to  be  yellow,  not  grey.  It  remains  to  be  ascertained 
how  far  these  differences  are  constant. — Benth. 

2.  C.  nuga  (the  Xuga  Brasiletto),  Ait.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  481  ; Benth.  FI.  Amir. 
ii.  277.  A woody  climber,  glabrous  in  all  its  parts,  armed  with  a few  scattered 
recurved  prickles,  especially  on  the  petioles.  Pinnse  2,  3,  or  4 pairs  ; leaflets 
2 or  3 pairs  to  each  pinna,  ovate,  If  to  2in.  long,  usually  rather  acute,  but 
occasionally  obtuse,  coriaceous  and  shining.  Racemes  4 to  Sin.  long,  forming 
large  terminal  panicles.  Pedicels  slender.  Lowest  sepal  about  5 lines  long, 
the  others  shorter.  Petals  scarcely  exceeding  the  lowest  sepal.  Ovary  with 
2 ovules.  Pod  obliquely  oval,  acuminate,  flat,  with  coriaceous  valves.  Seed 
usually  solitary,  flat,  broad. — C.  paniculata,  Desf.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  481  ; Wight, 
Ic.  t.  36. 

Hab.:  Barnard  Islands,  M'Gillivray. 

Generally  distributed  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  extending  to  S.  China. 

3.  *C.  sepiaria  (used  for  forming  hedges),  Roxb.;  W.  and  Am.  Prod.  282  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  277.  A woody  climber,  the  branches,  petioles  and  racemes 
more  or  less  tomentose  or  pubescent  and  armed  with  numerous  scattered  recurved 
prickles.  Pinnae  6 to  10  pairs  ; leaflets  8 to  12  pairs,  oblong,  very  obtuse,  rarely 
exceeding  fin.  in  length,  pubescent  or  villous  when  young,  often  glabrous  when 
old.  Stipules  broad  and  semisagittate,  but  very  deciduous,  or  sometimes  none. 
Flowers  numerous,  yellow,  in  axillary  and  terminal  racemes  of  5 or  Gin.  Pedicels 
longer  than  the  calyx.  Bracts  ovate,  acute,  very  deciduous.  Lowest  sepal  about 
5 lines  long.  Petals  about  6 lines.  Ovary  with  several  ovules.  Pod  oblong- 


Pl . XV 


TxTe^oriejJcrurny  Z>  r a chyrarp urns,  3en.&v. 
arixL; 

Me^on euTurny  S co r- te^hirixi > T.v.M. 

GwlZith/s  Pftict 

JirifbanA.  4 


F.C.WHU. 


Ceesalpinia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


451 


linear,  2 to  3in.  long  and  nearly  lin.  broad,  rounded  at  the  end,  with  a long 
narrow  point,  glabrous.  Seeds  6 to  8,  ovoid,  thick,  the  hilum  very  small  at  one 
end. — Wight,  Ic.  t.  37. 

H ib.:  Naturalised  in  many  parts  of  Queensland. 

An  E.  Indian  species,  much  planted  for  hedges,  and  now  naturalised  in  the  W.  Indies  and  many 
other  tropical  countries. — Benth. 


77.  MEZONEURUM,  Desf. 

(Referring  to  the  pod  having  a nerve  at  the  middle  ) 

Sepals  5,  shortly  united  at  the  base,  much  imbricated,  the  lowest  one  larger 
and  concave.  Petals  5,  spreading,  rather  unequal,  the  upper  inner  one  the 
smallest,  the  2 outer  lower  ones  the  largest.  Stamens  free  ; anthers  uniform, 
ovate  or  oblong.  Ovary  with  2 or  more  ovules ; style  subulate,  with  a very 
small  terminal  stigma.  Pod  quite  flat,  very  thin  or  coriaceous,  indehiscent  or 
opening  tardily  in  2 valves,  the  upper  suture  bordered  by  a wing.  Seeds  very 
flat,  reniform  or  orbicular,  with  a small  lateral  hilum  ; albumen  none. — Woody 
climbers  (or  rarely  erect?),  sparingly  armed  with  small  prickles,  usually  only 
at  the  base  of  the  pinnae  of  the  leaves.  Leaves  abruptly  bipinnate.  Flowers 
(yellow?)  in  racemes,  either  simple  in  the  upper  axils  or  forming  large  terminal 
panicles.  Filaments  glabrous  or  slightly  hairy. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  tropical  Asia  and  Africa,  with  2 Australian  species  which  appear 
to  be  endemic. 

Stems  with  several  longitudinal  flanges  of  cork.  Leaflets  oblong  or  oval, 

about  4 lines  long.  Pods  rhomboid-ovate,  acute,  1 to  ljin.  long  . . . 1.  M.  brachycarpum. 

Stems  without  corky  flanges.  Leaflets  distant,  oblong-elliptic,  lin.  long, 

Jin.  broad.  Pods  rhomboid-orbicular,  1J  to  2in.  diameter 2.  M.  Scortechinii. 

1.  2 Ml.  brachycarpum  (short  pods),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  278.  “ Bowar,” 

Nanango,  Shirley.  Tall,  rambling  or  climbing,  the  stems  and  branches  bearing 
lines  of  cork  flanges,  and  with  the  petioles  tomentose-pubescent,  unarmed  except 
a minute  prickle  under  each  raceme  and  a rather  larger  recurved  one  under  each 
pinna  of  the  leaf.  Leaves  often  above  lft.  long  ; pinnte  3 to  8 pairs,  each  3 to 
lin.  long;  leaflets  4 to  10  pairs,  ovate  oblong,  nearly  or  quite  sessile,  about 
4 lines  long,  glabrous  above,  pubescent  underneath.  Racemes  paniculate,  about 
Gin.  long,  clothed  with  a golden-yellow  pubescence  ; pedicels  very  short. 
Flowers  much  smaller  than  in  the  rest  of  the  genus,  the  calyx-lobes  not  above 
2 lines  long  and  the  petals  scarcely  exceeding  them.  Filaments  rather  longer, 
slightly  bearded  at  the  base.  Style  filiform,  with  a slightly  dilated  stigma. 
Ovules  2 (or  sometimes  3 ?).  Pod  rhomboid-ovate,  acute,  about  from  1 to  ljin. 
long,  with  a narrow  wing  along  the  upper  suture.  Seeds  blue,  flat,  reniform, 
hilum  small. 

Hab.:  River-side  scrubs  south  of  Brisbane. 

2.  IYI.  Scortechinii  (after  Rev.  B.  Scortechinii),  F.  v.  M.  in  Winy's  South. 
Sri.  Her.  ii.  73.  Stem  cylindrical,  greenish,  covered  with  a slight  mealy  tomen- 
tum.  Leaves  consisting  of  14  or  less  pairs  of  pinnae.  Rhachis  very  slightly 
downy,  with  broad,  somewhat  decurrent,  recurved  opposite  prickles,  usually  at 
the  base  of  the  pinnae.  Pinules  rather  densely  short-hairy,  the  lowest  with  8 to 
10,  the  others  with  14  to  13  leaflets;  the  latter  obovate  or  verging  to  elliptic, 
rather  distant,  lin.  long,  Jin.  broad,  of  thin  structure,  on  very  short  petiolules, 
inequilateral  towards  the  base,  above  nearly  glabrous,  beneath  paler  with  very 
short  and  appressed  hairs.  Racemes  many-flowered,  forming  a long  panicle;  the 
rhachis,  bracts,  and  petiolules  clothed  with  a short  brown  tomentum  ; petiolules 
not  much  shorter  than  the  calyces,  jointed  below  the  summit,  about  as  long  as 
the  narrowly  semi-lanceolar  finely  acuminated  bracts;  calyces  anteriorly  very 
oblique  and  almost  truncate  at  the  base  ; lateral  and  upper  segments  of  the  calyx 


452 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[Mezoneuruw 


oblong,  somewhat  shorter  than  the  lower  canalicular-cymbiform  blunt  segments, 
all  short-hairy  at  the  back.  Petals  yellow,  hardly  longer  than  the  calyx,  bearded 
inside  towards  tho  base,  their  lamina  obovate,  the  claw  of  the  upper  petal  rather 
elongate,  of  the  others  very  short ; stamens  shortly  exserted.  Filaments  bearded 
along  their  lower  half ; anthers  ovate.  Style  and  ovary  glabrous  ; ovules  2.  Pod 
from  1^  to  2in.  diameter,  almost  flat,  obliquely  rhomboid-orbicular,  obtuse,  some- 
what cartilaginous  ; the  ventral  suture  bordered  by  a broadish-linear  firm 
membrane.  Seed  solitary,  on  an  exceedingly  short  funicle,  orbicular,  opaque- 
greenish. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  South  and  north  of  Brisbane. 

Wood  of  the  climbing  steins  close-grained  and  tough,  of  a brown  colour.  Given  in  Bailey’s 
Cat.  Ql.  Woods  as  M.  brachyearpum,  No.  123a ; the  stems  of  which  species  as  now  understood 
are  much  smaller. 


78.  PTEROLOBIUM,  R.  Br. 

(Pods  winged.) 

Sepals  5,  united  in  a cup  at  the  base,  much  imbricate,  the  lowest  longer  and 
concave.  Petals  5,  spreading,  the  2 lowest  rather  larger  than  the  others. 
Stamens  10,  free ; anthers  ovate,  uniform.  Ovary  sessile,  with  a single  ovule. 
Style  filiform  or  slightly  clavate,  with  a truncate  stigma.  Pod  sessile,  samaroid, 
the  lower  seed-bearing  part  obliquely  ovate  or  lanceolate,  indehiscent,  ending  in 
an  oblique  oblong  or  falcate  membranous  wing.  Seed  attached  near  the  apex  of 
the  cell,  flat,  without  albumen. — Trees  or  woody  climbers,  armed  with  scattered 
hooked  prickles,  especially  at  the  base  of  the  pinnas  of  the  leaves.  Leaves 
abruptly  bipinnate.  Flowers  in  racemes,  either  simple  or  forming  terminal 
panicles.  Filaments  usually  bearded. 

The  genus  contains  very  few  species,  dispersed  over  tropical  Asia  and  Africa.  The  Australian 
one  is  endemic,  but  not  quite  certain  as  to  its  genus  until  the  fruit  has  been  seen.— Benth. 

1.  F.  nitens  (shining),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  279.  A 
handsome  woody  climber,  the  branchlets  and  rhachis  of  the  leaves  minutely 
rusty-pubescent.  Prickles  very  small,  except  under  the  pinnte  of  the  leaves. 
Pinnae  3 to  5 pairs  ; leaflets  3 to  5 pairs,  obliquely  obovate  or  almost  rhomboid, 
very  obtuse,  rarely  exceeding  |in.,  shining  above,  glabrous  or  ciliate  on  the  edge. 
Racemes  rusty-pubescent,  apparently  paniculate ; pedicels  much  shorter  than  in 
the  other  species,  scarcely  exceeding  1 line.  Flowers  rather  small.  Calyx  lower 
lobe  considerably  longer  than  the  others.  Filaments  bearded  at  the  base.  Style 
slightly  clavate.  Fruit  not  seen. 

Hab.:  Mount  Mueller,  near  Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallachy  ; Wide  Bay,  Leichhardt,  and  Rock- 
hampton, Thozet  (F.  v.  M.) 

Although  I have  not  seen  the  fruit,  the  1-ovulate  ovary,  bearded  stamens  and  style,  leave  little 
doubt  that  this  belongs  to  Pterolobium. — Benth. 


79.  PELTOPHORUM,  Vog. 

(Shield-bearing ; form  of  stigma.) 

(Ca:salpinia,  sect.  Brasilettia,  DC.) 

Sepals  5,  united  in  a cup  at  the  base,  much  imbricate,  nearly  equal  or  the 
lowest  rather  larger  and  more  concave.  Petals  5,  spreading,  undulate,  the  two 
lower  outer  ones  rather  larger  than  the  others.  Stamens  10,  free ; anthers 
uniform,  oblong-linear.  Ovary  sessile,  with  2 or  more  ovules ; style  filiform, 
with  a broad  peltate  stigma.  Pod  oblong-lanceolate,  thin  and  flat,  indehiscent, 
tapering  at  the  base,  the  margin  thin  and  faintly  marked  within  them  by  a longi- 
tudinal nerve  but  not  distinctly  winged.  Seeds  1,  2 or  rarely  more,  very  flat, 


Peltophorum.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


453 


without  albumen. — Tall  hard-woodecl  trees,  without  prickles.  Leaves  twice 
pinnate,  with  numerous  leaflets.  Flowers  yellow,  in  racemes  forming  terminal 
panicles. 

The  genus  consists  of  two  or  three  tropical  American  species,  one  in  S.E.  Africa,  and  one  or 
perhaps  two  in  the  Indian  Archipelago,  one  of  which  is  the  Australian  one. — Benth. 

1.  P.  ferrugineum  (referring  to  the  rusty  covering),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
279.  A large  tree,  the  young  branches  petioles  and  inflorescence  densely  rusty- 
tomentose.  Pinnte  of  the  leaves  8 to  10  pairs  ; leaflets  10  to  20  pairs  or  fewer 
on  the  lowest  pinnas,  oblong,  very  obtuse  or  retuse,  oblique  at  the  base,  to  fin. 
long,  shining  above,  minutely  rusty-tomentose  underneath.  Racemes  5 or  6in. 
long  or  more,  forming  a large  terminal  panicle.  Pedicels  very  short.  Bracts 
small,  lanceolate,  deciduous.  Calyx  4 to  5 lines  long,  globular  before  opening. 
Petals  rather  longer,  obovate,  undulate,  villous  at  the  base.  Pod  about  3 to  4in. 
long,  f to  nearly  lin.  broad,  shortly  acuminate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  glabrous 
or  nearly  so,  with  1,  2,  or  3 seeds. — Casalpinici  ferruginea,  Dene.  Herb.  Tim. 
Descr.  134  ; Miq.  FI.  Ind.  Bat.  1,  part  i.  Ill  and  1081  ; C.  arhorea,  Zoll.  in 
Miq.  l.c.  112. 

Hab.:  Queensland,  F.  v.  Mueller  (without  locality). 

In  the  Archipelago  from  Timor  to  the  Philippines.  Some  Malacca  specimens,  perhaps 
belonging  to  a different  although  closely  allied  species,  have  the  pods  twice  as  long,  with  3 or  4 
seeds. — Benth. 

80.  *PARKINSONIA,  Linn. 

(After  John  Parkinson,  a botanist  of  the  seventeenth  century.) 

Calyx  divided  nearly  to  the  base  into  5 subequal  membranous,  slightly 
imbricate  segments.  Petals  5,  spreading  stamens  10,  free,  scarcely  decimate ; 
filaments  pilose  at  the  base  ; anthers  uniform,  elliptical,  dehiscing  longitudinally. 
Ovary  narrowed  to  the  base,  8 to  10-ovulate  ; style  subfiliform,  recurved  in  bud  ; 
stigma  terminal,  minute.  Pod  narrow-linear,  narrowed  to  each  end,  usually 
constricted  between  the  subdistant  longitudinally-disposed  seeds,  thinly  coriaceous, 
longitudinally  reticulate-striate,  scarcely  or  not  at  all  dehiscent.  Seeds  1 to  6 or 
8,  oblong  or  subcylindrical,  albuminous. — Shrub  or  tree.  Leaves  bipinnate  ; 
pinnae  2 to  4,  with  the  rhachis  much  elongate,  flattened,  bearing  numerous  small 
oblong  or  linear,  opposite  or  scattered  leaflets,  which  are  occasionally  abortive  ; 
common  petiole  very  short  or  obsolete,  spine  pointed,  the  pinnae  appearing  as  very 
long  simply  pinnate  geminate  or  fascicled  leaves  at  first  sight.  Flowers  in  lax 
axillary  racemes,  yellow  ; bracts  early  caducous. 

A genus  of  3 species  (1  Cape  and  2 American). 

1.  P.  aculeata  (prickly),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  486.  .Jerusalem  Thorn 
of  the  West  Indies.  A glabrous  bush  or  small  tree,  armed  with  sharp  woody 
spines,  which  represent  the  primary  rhachis  of  a bipinnate  leaf,  and  have  2 to  6 
pinnae  congested  in  their  axils.  Pinnae  6 to  12in.  long,  the  rhachis  much 
flattened,  so  that  when  the  very  minute  obtuse  oblanceolate  leaflets  have  fallen  or 
are  not  developed  they  resemble  the  phyllodes  of  an  acacia.  Racemes  lax,  shorter 
than  the  leaves.  Pedicels  long,  slender,  erecto-patent.  Corolla  tender,  yellow, 
about  Jin.  Pod  3 to  4in.  long. 

Hab.:  This  South  American  plant  was  first  introduced  for  the  purpose  of  hedge-making,  but 
has  strayed  out  in  a few  localities. 

81.  CASSIA,  Linn. 

(The  Greek  Kasia  of  Dioscorides.) 

(Cathartoearpus,  D.  Don.) 

Sepals  5,  somewhat  unequal,  much  imbricate,  the  outer  ones  the  smallest, 
scarcely  connected  at  the  base.  Petals  5,  spreading,  nearly  equal  or  the  lower 
outer  ones  rather  larger.  Stamens  usually  10,  free,  either  all  nearly  equal  and 


454 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[ Cassia . 


perfect  or  2 or  8 lower  ones  larger  or  on  longer  filaments,  and  3 or  4 upper  ones 
reduced  to  small  staminodia  ; anthers  when  perfect  opening  at  the  end  in  pores 
or  in  short  lateral  slits.  Ovary  with  several  ovules,  incurved,  tapering  into  a 
short  style.  Pod  cylindrical  or  flat,  indehiscent  or  2-valved.  Seeds  oblong  or 
oboyate,  transverse,  with  fleshy  albumen  ; cotyledons  flat  or  rarely  folded,  usually 
cordate ; radicle  short,  straight. — Trees  shrubs  or  herbs.  Leaves  abruptly 
pinnate,  the  leaflets  opposite.  Flowers  yellow  or  very  rarely  reddish-purple  or 
white,  in  axillary  or  terminal  racemes  or  solitary.  Bracts  usually  deciduous. 
Bracteoles  none. 

A large  genus,  widely  distributed  within  the  tropical  and  subtropical  regions  of  both  the  New 
and  the  Old  World,  but  particularly  numerous  in  America.  Of  the  Queensland  ones,  many  are 
endemic.  The  genus  is  divided  into  several  sections,  founded  chiefly  upon  the  fruit;  but  as 
some  are  only  represented  in  Australia  by  single  species,  and  the  perfect  pod  rarely  accompanies 
the  specimens,  the  chief  divisions  in  the  following  synopsis  are,  for  convenience,  selected  also 
from  other  characters. — Benth.  (in  part). 

A.  Flowers  in  pedunculate  racemes  or  umbels,  either  axillary  or  forming  a terminal  panicle  or 
compound  raceme.  (The  Australian  species  all  shrubs  or  trees). 

Stamens  7 perfect,  of  which  2 or  3 lower  ones  larger  or  on  longer 
filaments  ; 3 small  and  imperfect  staminodia. 

Lower  stamens  with  long  filaments  and  short  ovate  anthers,  the  other 
perfect  ones  with  oblong-linear  anthers.  Pod  very  long  and  thick, 
with  horizontal  seeds  (Cathartocarpus) 1.  C.  Breusteri. 

Perfect  anthers  all  oblong-linear,  the  lower  ones  longer. 

Racemes  short,  almost  corymbose,  axillary  or  in  a narrow  terminal 
panicle.  Pod  thick  or  turgid.  Seeds  mostly  horizontal. 

(Chamaefistula.) 

Leaflets  4 to  5 pairs.  Petiole  with  obtuse  gland  near  base. 


Pod  flattened  (Annual) 2.  C.  occidentalis. 

Pod  with  a broad  longitudinal  wing  on  each  valve 3.  C.  alata. 

Leaflets  3 or  4 pairs,  with  glands  between  those  of  each  pair,  but 

none  on  the  petiole  below 4.  C.  Icevigata. 

Leaflets  4 to  10  pairs,  with  a gland  at  the  base  of  the  petiole,  but 

none  between  the  leaflets 5.  C.  Sopliera. 

Racemes  elongated,  on  long  axillary  peduncles.  Bracts  large, 
deciduous.  Pod  very  flat.  (Chamssenna.) 

Glabrous.  Leaflets  4 to  8 pairs,  large,  broad,  very  obtuse,  reticu- 
late. Stipules  ovate.  Bracts  broad,  obtuse 6.  C.  magnifolia. 

Pubescent.  Leaflets  9 to  15  pairs,  oblong  or  ovate,  obtuse, 

mucronate.  Stipules  ovate-cordate,  acuminate,  rigid.  Bracts 
broad,  obtuse 7.  C.  venusta. 

Pubescent.  Leaflets  9 to  15  pairs,  ovate-lanceolate,  acute, 

mucronate.  Stipules  narrow.  Bracts  acuminate 8.  C.  notabilis. 

Glabrous.  Leaflets  4 or  5 pairs,  oblong-linear.  Stipules  small, 

subulate.  Bracts  broad,  obtuse 9.  C.  pleurocarpa. 


Stamens  10,  all  with  oblong-linear  perfect  anthers,  all  equal  or  the  lower 
ones  rather  longer.  (Psilorhegrma.) 

Glands  between  the  leaflets  (at  least  of  the  lowest  pair)  oblong,  subulate 
or  stipitate,  very  rarely  wanting. 

Bracts  acuminate. 

Glabrous  or  minutely  pubescent.  Leaflets  6 to  10  pairs,  obovate. 

Bracts  lanceolate,  often  rather  broad 10.  C.  glauca. 

Softly  pubescent.  Leaflets  4 to  6 pairs,  obovate  or  cuneate,  mostly 

emarginate.  Bracts  very  narrow 11.  C.  retusa. 

Bracts  small,  broad,  obtuse.  Leaflets  oblong-lanceolate  or  linear. 

Leaflets  usually  6 to  10  pairs 12.  C.  australis. 

Leaflets  usually  3 to  5 pairs 13.  C.  Cliatelainiana. 

Glands  between  the  leaflets  sessile,  flat,  obscure  or  none  (ovoid  in  C. 
leptoclada). 

Glabrous  or  glaucous.  Stipules  leafy,  semicordate.  Leaflets  usually 

3 to  5 pairs 14.  C.  pruinosa. 

Glabrous,  glaucous,  hoary,  or  wbite-tomentose.  Stipules  small, 
subulate,  or  none.  Flowers  in  very  short  corymbose  racemes. 

Leaves  all  simple,  phyllodineous.  Glands  none  or  on  the  upper 
edge  about  the  middle. 

Leaves  usually  slender  and  green.  Peduncles  1 or  2-flowered. 

Pod  very  much  curved  or  annular 15.  C.  circinata. 


PL.XVI. 


Cassvx/  Ij  t yjays ter  i/,  T.  vl/f  £ veers. 


(rov}l.it]u> . 

Jirirhans..  <’/ 


F.C . WzLU. 


fWfl.]  XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE.  455 

Leaves  usually  thick,  hoary  or  white,  vertically  compressed. 

Peduncles  several-flowered.  Pod  straight  or  slightly  curved  . 10.  G.  phyllodima. 
Leaflets  1 or  more  pairs,  rarely  none  in  the  lower  leaves  and  then 
the  phyllodineous  petiole  has  a gland  at  the  end. 

Leaflets  mostly  1 or  2 pairs,  terete  or  linear 17.  C.  eremophila. 

Leaflets  mostly  3 to  6 pairs,  linear-terete,  channelled  above  . . 18.  C.  artemisioides. 

Leaflets  mostly  3 to  6 pairs,  linear-lanceolate,  cuneate,  elliptical 

or  almost  obovate 19.  C.  Sturtii. 

Leaflets  1,  2,  or  rarely  3 pairs,  ovate,  obovate,  or  broadly  oblong. 

Pod  not  above  Jin.  broad 20.  G.  desolata. 

Leaflets  2 or  rarely  1 pair,  broadly  obovate.  Pod  nearly  fin. 

broad,  very  obtuse 21.  G.  oligophylla. 

Softly  pubescent.  Leaflets  2 to  4 pairs,  elliptical-oblong.  Stipules 

small,  setaceous.  Flowers  in  an  umbel  of  4 to  6 22.  C.  oligoclada. 

Glabrous  and  glaucous.  Stems  slender.  Leaflets  2 pairs,  obovate  or 

oblong.  Glands  ovoid.  Stipules  minute.  Peduncles  2-flowered  . 23.  C.  leptoclada. 

B.  Floivers  in  simple  racemes,  either  terminal  or  becoming  lateral  by  the  elongation  of  the  branch. 
Stamens  5 to  10,  all  perfect.  Pod  flat.  (Absus.j 

Herbaceous.  Leaflets  2 pairs,  obovate 24.  C.  Absus. 


C.  Peduncles  1-flowcred,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together  in  or  just  above  the  axils.  Stamens  5 to  10, 
all  perfect.  Pod  flat.  (Chamascrista.) 

Leaflets  usually  under  12  pairs.  Gland  stipitate  below  the  lowest  pair. 

Sepals  rather  obtuse.  Anthers  5. 

Petals  scarcely  longer  than  the  calyx.  Stigma  peltate 25.  G.  pumila. 

Petals  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Stigma  small 26.  C concinna. 

Leaflets  above  20  pairs.  Sepals  very  acute.  Anthers  6 to  10 27.  G.  mimosoides. 

Section  I.  Cathartocarpus. — Sepals  obtuse.  Stamens  10,  8 or  4 upper  ones 
small  ancl  imperfect  ; 5 or  4 equal,  perfect,  with  short  filaments  and  oblong  -or 
linear  anthers,  opening  in  terminal  pores  and  sometimes  also  in  short  slits  ; 

2 or  3 lower  ones  with  long  filaments  and  short  ovate  anthers  opening  on  the 
inner  face  in  short  slits.  Pod  long,  hard,  thick  or  terete  usually  indehiscent. 
Seeds  more  or  less  flattened  and  lying  horizontally  in  the  pod  (the  flat  sides  at 
right  angles  to  the  valves),  separated  by  complete  partitions. — Usually  trees. 
Flowers  in  axillary  pedunculate  racemes. 

1.  C.  Brewsteri  (after  David  Brewster),  F.  v.  M.  4th  Ann.  Bep.  17  ; Bentli. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  282.  A shrub  or  small  tree,  attaining  30  to  40ft.,  usually  glabrous 
in  all  its  parts.  Leaflets  2 to  4 pairs,  from  narrow  ovate  or  obovate  and  about 
fin.  long  to  narrow-oblong  or  oblong-lanceolate  and  2in.  long,  obtuse  or 
emarginate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  the  common  petiole  without  glands.  Racemes 

3 to  Gin.  long.  Bracts  minute  or  none.  Pedicels  slender.  Sepals  about  3 lines 
long.  Petals  stipitate,  narrow-ovate,  rather  obtuse,  about  4 lines  long.  Fila- 
ments of  the  3 long  lower  stamens  longer  than  the  petals,  swollen  into  a globular 
appendage  about  the  middle,  with  ovate  anthers,  the  other  stamens  shorter  than 
the  petals.  Pod  often  exceeding  1ft.  long,  about  12  lines  wide,  thick  but  slightly 
compressed,  the  edges  persistent  after  the  inside  has  fallen  away.  Seeds  thick, 
ovoid,  the  testa  pulpy  when  soaked  ; albumen  copious. — Cathartocarpus  Brewsteri, 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  110. 

Hab  : Hilly  pastures  and  river  banks  on  the  Burdekin,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Rockhampton,  Thozet  ; 
Port  Denison  and  Fitzroy  River,  Bowman  ; Clermont. 

Wood  pale-yellow,  close-grained,  and  nicely  marked. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  124. 

Var.  sylvestris  (of  the  woods),  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  3 ( C.  Fistula,  var.  silvestris,  Rumph. 
Herbarium  Amboinense  ii.  88,  pi.  22),  A tree  of  medium  size,  erect  trunk  with  dark 
rough  bark  ; branchlets  angular,  nearly  glabrous.  Leaves  linear  in  outline,  slightly 
hoary  ; leaflets  of  about  8 or  9 pairs,  broadly  ovate,  the  terminal  ones  2Jin.  long,  slightly 
glossy  on  the  upper  surface,  pale  beneath,  on  short  petiolules.  Flowers  as  above.  Pod  glabrous, 
glossy  dark-brown,  about  ljft.  long,  and  about  Jin.  broad  and  nearly  as  thick,  compressed, 
cylindric,  deeply  indented  between  the  seeds,  suture  margin  entire  and  straight,  about  1 line 
broad,  internal  arrangement  as  above.  Seed  not  so  glossy  as  the  first  form,  roundish,  about  3 


Part  ii.  K 


456 


XLIir.  LEGUMINOS^R. 


|"  ( yassia. 


lines  long.  Hab.:  Kamerunga,  Barron  River,  K.  Cowley.—  Dr.  G.  E.  Rutnphius,  in  Herbarium 
Amboinensis,  vol.  ii.  88,  seems  to  think  the  tree  might  be  called  “ The  Old  Man’s  Consolation 
Tree,  ’ for,  although  it  is  not  known  to  possess  medicinal  properties,  yet  the  long  tough  flexible 
pods  have  a use,  for  the  old  men  beat  their  backs  with  them,  to  keep  their  backs  from  becoming 
stiff  — Wood  of  a golden-brown  colour,  close-grained,  and  would  be  likely  to  resist  attack  of  white 
ants  on  account  of  its  intense  bitterness  ; valuable  wood  for  building  and  cabinet-work.  Bailey’s 
Cat.  Ql.  IVoods  No.  124b. 

Var.  Marksiana  (after  Hon.  C.  F.  Marks),  Bail.  Ql.  Agri.  Journ.  i.  part  1.  An  erect 
tree  of  50  or  60ft. , trunk  12  or  more  inches  in  diameter ; branchlets  dark-coloured,  fluted. 
Leaves  8 or  9in.  long,  bearing  about  7 or  8 pairs  of  leaflets,  glabrous  except  for  a slight  tomentum 
upon  the  rhachis ; leaflets  from  nearly  lanceolate  to  oblong-ovate,  1 to  3 Jin.  long,  shortly 
petiolulate  ; the  leaves  nearest  to  the  flower  racemes  often  of  only  3 leaflets.  Racemes  terminal 
on  the  branchlets,  about  3in.  long.  Flowers  crowded,  on  slender  pedicels ; bracts  minute. 
Sepals  oblong,  3 lines  long,  pubescent  on  the  back.  Petals  yellow,  5 or  6 lines  long,  obtuse, 
tapering  to  the  base,  marked  by  a dark  central  and  distant  lateral  veins.  Stamens  of  the  normal 
form.  Pod  about  1ft.  long,  5 lines  broad,  nearly  terete,  dark  glossy-brown,  and  marked  with 
transverse  ribs  between  the  seeds.  Hab.:  Upper  Nerang  Creek.  Foliage  and  wood,  F.  M. 
Bailey,  1886.  Flowers,  pod,  and  leaf,  Hon.  C.  F.  Marks,  M.D..  Dec.  1896.— I saw  trees  of 
this  form  growing  at  the  above  locality  when  collecting  timbers  for  the  Colonial  and  Indian 
Exhibition  in  1886,  but  could  not  then  obtain  flowers  or  pods,  and  thinking  that  the  distinction 
in  foliage  might  be  due  to  situation,  had  a log  worked  up,  and  gave  it  in  the  catalogue  as  var. 
tomentella.  — Wood  pinkish,  close-grained,  and  tough.  Bailey's  Cat  Ql.  I Voocls  No.  124a. 

Var.  tomentella,  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  282.  Bean-tree  of  Obum  Obum.  An  erect,  slender- 
stemmed tree,  20  or  30ft.  high  ; the  branches,  under  side  of  the  leaflets,  and  inflorescence 
minutely  hoary-tomentose.  Leaflets  short,  broad,  almost  orbicular,  shining  on  the  face,  very 
dark-green.  Flowers  rather  small.  Pod  cylindrical,  1 to  2ft.  long,  Jin.  diameter,  bright  reddish- 
brown.  Hab.:  Hill  scrubs  about  Obum  Obum. 

The  seeds  of  this  and  some  other  species  of  Fistula  and  Chamajistula  appear  to  be  flattened 
at  right  angles  to  the  embryo,  which,  as  in  the  other  sections  of  Cassia,  lies  thus  parallel  to 
thd  valves.  In  others,  such  as  the  African  C.  yoratensis,  I have  seen  the  cotyledons  so  folded 
as  to  have  no  particular  relative  position,  but  I have  as  yet  been  able  to  examine  but  very  few 
perfect  seeds  in  either  of  these  sections. — Benth. 

2.  *C.  OCCidentalis  (western  species),  Linn.  Spec.  PI.  539;  Benth.  in  Trans. 
Linn.  Soc.  27  p.  532.  Stem  firmly  herbaceous  or  woody  below,  annual  or  of  two 
or  three  years’  duration,  erect,  often  forming  dense  bushy  masses,  a few  feet  in 
height,  glabrous  or  nearly  so.  Leaflets  membranous,  4 to  5 pairs,  ovate  or 
elliptical-lanceolate,  usually  acute  or  acuminate,  glabrous,  minutely  ciliolate  or 
absolutely  pubescent  beneath,  1J  to  2Jin.  long,  the  upper  varying  to  3 or  4in.; 
common  petiole  without  interpetiolular  glands,  but  with  a short  obtuse  gland  near 
the  base,  black  when  dry.  Stipules  lanceolate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  membranous, 
deciduous.  Flowers  in  short  few-flowered  axillary  racemes  or  fascicles,  the 
peduncle  and  pedicels  seldom  exceeding  lin.,  or  towards  the  ends  of  the  branches, 
the  fascicles  confluent,  forming  an  interrupted  terminal  raceme;  the  leaves  reduced 
or  bract-like.  Bracts  thin,  linear-lanceolate  or  oblong,  acuminate,  deciduous. 
Sepals  obtuse,  glabrous  or  nearly  so,  the  outer  rather  shorter.  Petals  obtuse, 
venose.  Two  anterior  stamens  larger,  with  slightly  curved  anthers  Jin.  long, 
shortly  and  broadly  produced  at  the  apex.  Legume  2-valved,  linear  compressed, 
slightly  falcate  or  straight,  apiculate,  rather  coriaceous,  margined  with  straight 
sutures,  3J  to  5in.  long,  3 or  4 lines  broad  ; the  pericarp  when  dry  usually 
depressed  between  the  seeds,  which  are  usually  but  not  always  flattened  in  the 
same  plane  as  the  pod.  Cotyledons  plane  or  nearly  so,  in  the  larger  diameter  of 
the  seeds,  enclosed  between  thick  layers  of  album, en. — Oliver  FI.  Trop.  Afr.  ii. 
274. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  near  Cooktown,  Boht.  M'Dougall,  who  sent  it  to  Brisbane  as  a 
suspected  poison  herb. 

This  plant  is  probably  of  American  origin,  but  now  common  in  tropical  America,  Asia,  Africa, 
and  seems  naturalised  also  in  Queensland.  Dr.  Lindley,  Flora  Medica,  261,  says  “ The  root 
greatly  stimulates  the  lymphatic  system,  and  is,  therefore,  very  beneficial  in  obstructions  and 
weakness  of  the  stomach  and  incipient  dropsy,  against  which  disease  it  is  used  as  a diuretic.” 


Cassia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS.F. 


457 


Section  II.  Cham^efistula. — Sepals  obtuse.  Stamens  10,  3 upper  ones  small 
and  imperfect,  7 perfect,  the  2 or  3 lower  ones  often  larger  or  on  longer  filaments 
than  the  others  ; anthers  oblong-linear,  the  cells  opening  in  terminal  pores. 
Pod  terete  or  turgid,  or  if  compressed  thick,  woody  coriaceous  or  membranous, 
indehiscent  or  2-valved.  Seeds  some  or  all  more  or  less  flattened  and  lying 
horizontally  in  the  pod  (at  right  angles  to  the  valves),  separated  hy  complete  or 
incomplete  partitions  or  pulp. — Shrubs,  or  in  species  not  Australian,  tall  herbs. 
Flowers  in  axillary  pedunculate  racemes  or  terminal  panicles. 

3.  *C.  alata  (winged),  Linn;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  492.  A shrub  attaining  the 
height  of  8 to  10ft.,  glabrous  or  subglabrous,  the  stipules  deltoid,  persistent. 
Leaves  1 to  2ft.  long,  rhachis  acutely  margined  above  when  dry,  glandular,  with 
a prominent  transverse  ridge  connecting  the  opposite  leaflets  Leaflets  in  9 to  12 
pairs,  oblong,  obtuse,  2 to  Gin.  long,  minutely  mucronate,  rigidly  subcoriaceous, 
with  an  oblique  truncate  base,  subsessile  or  petiolulate.  Racemea  pedunculate, 
^ to  1ft.  long  ; bracts  large,  membranous,  f to  lin.  long,  caducous,  coloured, 
imbricate  at  first.  Sepals  coloured,  membranous.  Corolla  yellow,  veined. 
Stamens  very  unequal,  the  two  anterior  ones  with  enlarged  strongly  curved 
anthers.  Pod  membranous,  linear,  apiculate,  5 or  Gin.  long,  about  fin.  broad, 
each  valve  with  a very  prominent  crenate  longitudinal  wing  extending  the  entire 
length  of  the  valve.  Seeds  about  50,  rhomboid-cuneate. 

Hab  : This  widely  spread  tropical  shrub  has  of  late  years  become  naturalised  in  the  Barren 
Biver  district. — E.  Cowley. 

4.  C.  laevigata  (smooth -leaved),  Willd.;  Toy.  Syn.  Cass.  19 ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  282.  An  erect  glabrous  shrub  of  several  feet.  Leaflets  3 or  4 or  rarely 
2 pairs,  ovate  to  lanceolate,  usually  acuminate,  If  to  Sin.  long,  with  an  oblong  or 
slender  gland  between  those  of  each  pair.  Racemes  axillary,  pedunculate,  short 
and  almost  corymbose,  the  upper  ones  forming  a short  terminal  panicle.  Sepals 
unequal,  the  inner  ones  4 or  5 lines  long.  Petals  broad,  very  obtuse,  varying 
from  4-  to  fin.  Perfect  anthers  4,  almost  sessile,  1 on  a short  and  2 on  much 
longer  filaments.  Pod  2 to  3in.  long,  membranous  or  slightly  coriaceous, 
cylindrical  or  more  or  less  inflated  when  ripe,  2 to  3in.  long,  opening  at  length  in 
2 valves.  Seeds  crowded  and  horizontal  or  the  upper  ones  less  crowded  and 
almost  vertical. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  14. 

Hab.:  Near  Brisbane,  Kockingham  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

A common  species  in  tropical  America,  occurring  also  in  tropical  Africa,  but  probably 
introduced  there  and  perhaps  not  really  indigenous  in  Australia. — Benth. 

5.  C.  Sophera  (an  Egyptian  name),  Linn.;  Voy.  Syn.  Cass.  20,  var.  schini- 
folia  (Pepistra-leaved)  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  288.  An  erect  shrub  or  undershrub 
of  several  feet,  usually  glabrous.  Leaflets  4 to  10  pairs,  lanceolate,  mostly  acute, 
1 to  2in.  long,  with  an  obovate  or  ovate  acute  gland  on  the  petiole  near  the  base. 
Racemes  short  and  few-flowered,  on  short  peduncles  in  the  upper  axils,  and 
forming  a narrow  terminal  almost  raceme-like  panicle.  Sepals  3 to  4 lines 
long.  Petals  broad,  obtuse.  Perfect  anthers,  2 larger  than  the  others,  all  on 
short  filaments.  Pod  2 to  4in.  long,  at  first  flat  but  thick,  when  ripe  terete  or 
turgid,  2-valved.  Seeds  crowded  and  mostly  or  all  horizontal. — C.  schinifolia,  A. 
DC.  7th  Not.  PI.  Rar.  Hort.  Gen.  35  ; C.  Barclayana,  Sweet,  FI.  Austral,  t.  32  ; 
Vog.  Syn.  Cass.  45  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  14. 

Hab.:  Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller;  near  Fort  Cooper,  Thozet;  Moreton  to  Rockingham 
Bay,  Dallachy,  C.  Stuart ; Ipswich,  Nernst. 

Var.  puhescens.  Branches,  petioles,  and  inflorescence  more  or  less  pubescent.  Petiolar  gland 
occasionally  disappearing. — Broadsound,  It.  Broivn,  Bowman. 

This  species,  in  its  glabrous  form,  is  common  in  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  and  in  tropical 
Africa.  It  is  there  often  confounded  with  C.  occidentalis,  of  which  I had  formerly  considered  it 
a variety,  and  under  which  it  is  included  in  Hooker  and  Thomson’s  Indian  distributions.  The 
latter  species  is,  however,  annual,  with  the  few  leaflets  of  C.  laviyata,  but  with  the  petiolar  gland 
of  C.  Sophera,  and  the  pod  remains  flat,  although  thick  when  ripe. — Benth. 


4- 58 


XLTII.  LEGUMINOS.E. 


[Cassia. 


Section  III.  Cham.esenna. — Sepals  obtuse.  Stamens  of  Chamai  fistula.  Pod 
very  Hat  and  thin.  Seeds  flattened  parallel  to  the  embryo,  and  lying  vertically 
in  the  pod  (parallel  to  the  valves),  separated  by  more  or  less  complete  partitions 
or  thin  pulp.  Shrubs.  Flowers  in  axillary  pedunculate  racemes  or  terminal 
panicles. 

6.  C.  magnifolia  (large-leaved),  F.  r.  .17.  Fragm.  i.  166  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  288.  Glabrous.  Leaflets  4 to  8 pairs,  broadly  ovate,  very  obtuse  and 
emarginate,  broao  and  oblique  at  the  base,  2 to  Bin.  long,  coriaceous  and  strongly 
veined  on  both  sides,  the  common  petiole  ^ to  1ft.  long;  glands  between  the 
leaflets  obscure  or  none.  Stipules  persistent,  ovate,  the  margins  recurved  at  the 
base.  Peduncles  attaining  1ft.  in  length,  rigid,  bearing  a raceme  in  the  upper 
part.  Bracteoles  linear-lanceolate,  near  the  calyx,  fugaceous.  Sepals  oblong  or 
oval,  about  6 lines  long.  Petals  ovate,  veiny,  slender- clawed,  about  8 lines  long. 
Fruiting  pedicels  lin.  long.  Pod  very  flat,  8 to  4in.  long,  fin.  broad,  glabrous, 
with  thin  valves.  Seeds  flat,  on  slender  funicles  ; albumen  scanty. 

Hub.:  Clarke’s  River  and  rocky  granite  ridges.  Upper  Gilbert  River,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Chillagoe 
and  Herberton,  R.  C.  Burton.  In  flower  January  and  February. 

7.  C.  venusta  (lovely),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  i.  165;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  284. 
A tall  shrub  or  small  tree,  the  young  parts  softly  silky-pubescent,  or  villous, 
becoming  at  length  nearly  glabrous.  Leaflets  10  to  15  pairs,  or  in  smaller 
specimens  7 to  10  pairs,  oblong  or  ovate-oblong,  obtuse  and  finely  mucronate,  .1 
to  2in.  long,  very  obliquely  rounded  at  the  base,  rather  coriaceous  ; glands  very 
small  between  the  leaflets  of  most  pairs.  Stipules  ovate-cordate,  acuminate,  rigid 
and  persistent,  especially  at  the  base  of  the  peduncles,  the  margins  usually  revolute 
at  the  base.  Peduncles  in  the  upper  axils  4 to  1ft.  long,  rigid,  bearing  in  their 
upper  portion  a raceme  of  flowers  on  short  pedicels.  Bracts  membranous, 
orbicular,  imbricate  before  flowering,  but  soon  falling  off.  Sepals  5 to  nearly  6 
lines  long.  Petals  rather  longer.  Perfect  anthers  7 on  short  filaments,  2 of 
them  nearly  twice  as  large  as  the  others,  3 small  imperfect  stamens.  Ovary 
villous.  Pod  very  flat,  about  Bin.  long  and  |in.  broad.  Seeds  flat,  rather  distant. 

Hab.:  Lake  Nash,  M.  Costello  ; North  Queensland  inland. 

8.  C.  notabilis  (notable),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  28  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  284. 
Villous  with  long  soft  hairs.  Leaflets  9 to  15  pairs,  ovate-lanceolate  or  oval- 
oblong,  acute  or  the  lower  ones  obtuse  and  mucronate,  sessile,  very  obliquely 
rounded  or  truncate  at  the  base,  1 to  141n.  long  ; glands  very  small  between  the 
leaflets  of  most  of  the  pairs.  Stipules  narrow  and  deciduous.  Racemes  on 
elongated  peduncles  in  the  upper  axils.  Bracts  lanceolate,  acuminate,  very 
deciduous.  Pedicels  short.  Sepals  villous,  about  3 lines  long.  Petals  shortly 
exceeding  the  calyx.  Perfect  anthers  7 on  very  short  filaments,  of  which  2 larger 
than  the  others  ; 8 small  imperfect  stamens.  Ovary  glabrous.  Pod  1 to  Hin. 
long,  very  shortly  stipitate,  oblong-lanceolate. 

Hab.:  The  sandy  ridges  of  the  Georgina  River,  E.  J.  Whelan. 


9.  C.  pleurocarpa  (pod  ribbed),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  223  and  ii.  182  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  284.  A tall  erect  glabrous  shrub.  Leaflets  usually  4 or  5 rather  distant 
pairs,  oblong-linear,  H to  2in.  long,  rather  thick  ; glands  none.  Stipules  small, 
subulate,  deciduous.  Flowers  loosely  racemose  in  the  upper  portion  of  axillary 
peduncles.  Bracts  membranous,  broad,  obtuse,  very  deciduous.  Sepals  thin, 
broad,  3 to  34-  lines  long.  Petals  unequal,  rather  longer  than  the  calyx. 
Perfect  anthers  7 on  short  filaments,  2 of  them  nearly  twice  as  large  as  the  others 
and  incurved ; 3 small  imperfect  stamens.  Ovary  glabrous.  Pod  stipitate,  flat, 


Cassia .] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


459 


very  obtuse,  about  2in.  long  and  |in.  wide,  the  valves  thin  with  a raised  longi- 
tudinal line  along  the  centre,  interrupted  between  each  seed.  Seeds  thick, 
cuneate-oblong,  truncate,  with  a raised  line  across  each  near  the  end,  correspond- 
ing to  that  on  the  pod  ; albumen  copious. 

Hub.:  Warrego  and  Maranoa. 

Section  IV.  Psilokhegma. — Sepals  obtuse.  Stamens  10,  all  perfect  and 
similar  or  the  lower  ones  rather  larger ; anthers  oblong-linear,  opening  in  slits 
either  short  and  terminal  or  extending  more  or  less  down  the  sides.  Pod  very 
flat  and  thin.  Seeds  flattened  parallel  to  the  embryo  and  lying  vertically  in  the 
pod  (parallel  to  the  valves)  separated  by  more  or  less  complete  partitions  or  thin 
pulp. — Shrubs.  Flowers  in  very  short  corymbose  racemes  or  umbels  pedunculate 
in  the  axils,  rarely  reduced  to  2 flowers. 

10.  C.  glauca  (bluish-grey),  Lam.;  Encycr.  A tall  weak  shrub,  quite 
glabrous  or  the  young  branches  inflorescence  and  under  side  of  the  leaves 
pubescent.  Leaflets  6 to  10  pairs,  obovate  or  broadly  oblong,  obtuse,  mostly  1 to 
1-J-in.  long;  glands  oblong  or  slender,  usually  stipitate,  between  those  of  the  1, 

2 or  3 lowest  pairs.  Stipules  linear  or  subulate.  Flowers  in  short  umbel-like 
racemes  in  the  upper  axils.  Bracts  lanceolate,  acuminate,  rather  persistent. 
Sepals  very  obtuse,  the  inner  ones  3 to  4 lines  long.  Petals  broad,  ^in.  long  or 
more,  2 or  3 lower  ones  rather  larger  than  the  others.  Anthers  all  on  short 
filaments,  2 or  3 rather  larger  than  the  others.  Pod  3 to  4in.  or  more  long,  4 to 

5 lines  broad. — W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  289  ; C.  acclinis,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  13  ; 
C.  suffruticosa,  Koen  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  285. 

Hab.:  Percy  Islands,  A.  Cunningham;  Rockhampton,  Dallachy  ; Edgecombe  Bay  and  Port 
Denison,  Fitzalan  ; Ipswich,  Nernst : Rosewood,  and  many  other  localities. 

11.  C.  retusa  (retuse),  Suland.;  Vog.  in  Innncea,  xv.  72  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  285.  Shrubby  and  softly  pubescent,  especially  the  young  parts.  Leaflets  4 to 

6 pairs,  obovate  to  oblong-cuneate,  very  obtuse  or  emarginate,  J to  above  lin. 
long  ; glands  slender  or  stipitate  between  those  of  the  1,2  or  3 lowest  pairs. 
Stipules  linear,  acuminate,  deciduous.  Flowers  crowded  in  short  almost 
umbellate  racemes,  on  axillary  peduncles  shorter  than  the  leaves.  Bracts  narrow, 
acuminate.  Sepals  broad,  very  obtuse.  Petals  not  twice  as  long.  Anthers  all 
nearly  equal.  Pod  stipitate,  2 to  4in.  long,  4 to  5 lines  broad. 

Hab.:  Bustard  Bay,  Banks  and  Solander ; Shoalwater  Bay,  Broadsound  and  Thirsty  Sound, 
It.  Brown. 

The  species  is  closely  allied  on  the  one  hand  to  C.  glauca , on  the  other  to  some  forms  of 
C.  australis. 

12.  C.  australis  (Australian),  Sims  Bot.  Mag.  t.  2G7G  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  285.  A tall  erect  shrub,  either  quite  glabrous  or  loosely  pubescent,  the  young 
branches  more  or  less  angular.  Leaflets  usually  8 to  10  pairs,  in  some  specimens 
reduced  to  6 or  7,  in  others  increased  to  11  or  12  pairs,  oblong  lanceolate  or 
almost  linear,  obtuse  or  acute,  i to  f or  rarely  lin.  long,  the  margins  usually 
recurved  and  sometimes  revolute  ; glands  slender  or  stipitate  between  the  leaflets 
of  most  or  only  of  the  lower  pairs,  or  rarely  almost  none.  Stipules  subulate, 
deciduous.  Flowers  2 to  6 in  a loose  umbel  on  peduncles  usually  shorter  than 
the  leaves,  but  sometimes  longer.  Bracts  small,  broad,  obtuse.  Sepals  very 
obtuse,  2 to  3 lines  long.  Petals  broad,  iin.  long  or  rather  more.  Anthers  2 or 

3 often  rather  larger  than  the  others.  Pod  shortly  stipitate,  glabrous,  3 to  4in. 
long,  3 to  4 lines  broad,  straight  or  curved  into  a half-circle.  Seeds  shining 
black. — Bot.  Reg.  t.  1322  ; C.  umbellata,  Roichb.  Icon.  Fxot.  t.  20G  ; ('.  Schultesii, 
Colla,  Hort.  Ripul.  App.  ii.  344,  and  iii.  t.  10;  C.  Barrentiehlii  (afterwards 
corrected  to  C.  Fieldii),  Colla,  Hort.  Ripul.  App.  iv.  23,  t.  11  ; <’.  roronilloiihs, 
A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  384. 


4 BO 


XLiii.  leuuminosai. 


[ Cassia . 


Hab.:  Broadsound,  R.  Brown,  A.  Cunningham;  Burdekin  River  and  Peak  Downs,  F.  v. 
Mueller;  Rockhampton,  Thozet ; Comet  and  Condamine  Rivers,  Leichhardt;  Darling  Downs, 
Brisbane  River,  &c.  In  flower  September. 

The  pods  of  this  species  have  been  known  to  bear  the  fungus  Tubercularia  leguminum. 

Var.  revoluta.  Leaflets  narrow-linear  and  acute,  the  margins  much  revolute,  glabrous  or 
pubescent. — C.  revoluta,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  1852,  120;  C.  aciphxjlla,  Benth.  in  A. 
Gray,  Bot.  Arner.  Expl.  Exped.  i.  405.  To  this  belong  some  of  the  southern  specimens  from  the 
interior ; also  Moggil  Creek,  Brisbane  River.  In  flower  and  seed  May. 

13.  C.  Chatelainiana  (after  — Chatelaine),  Gaud,  in  Freyc.  Voy.  485, 
t.  Ill  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  286.  An  erect  glabrous  shrub  of  several  feet. 
Leaflets  3,  4 or  5 rather  distant  pairs,  linear,  obtuse,  about  f to  lin.  long,  rather 
thick,  flat  ; gland  usually  long  and  subulate  between  those  of  the  lowest  pair 
only,  but  sometimes  also  of  the  next  pair,  or  rarely  wanting.  Flowers  rather 
large,  in  umbels  at  the  end  of  short  axillary  peduncles  with  sometimes  1 or  2 
pedicels  below  the  umbel.  Bracts  ovate  or  oblong,  very  obtuse.  Sepals  nearly 
3 lines  long.  Petals  broad,  \ to  fin.  long.  Lower  stamens  rather  larger  than 
the  others.  Pod  straight,  often  £in.  broad. — Tog.  Syn.  Cass.  47. 

Hab.:  Queensland  (without  locality),  F.  v.  Mueller. 

Very  nearly  allied  on  the  one  hand  to  C.  australis,  in  which,  however,  the  leaflets  when  linear 
are  usually  revolute,  and  on  the  other  to  C.  eremophila,  which  has  fewer  leaflets  without  the  subulate 
gland. — Bentli. 

14.  C.  pruinosa  (pruinose),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  48  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  286.  A tall  erect  shrub,  glabrous  but  often  more  or  less  glaucous. 
Leaflets  3 to  5 pairs,  oblong-elliptical,  rather  obtuse,  + to  fin.  long,  rather  thick 
and  flat ; gland  small  and  flat,  usually  between  the  leaflets  of  the  lowest  1 or  2 
pairs.  Stipules  broad,  leafy,  semi-cordate.  Flowers  rather  large,  2 to  5 together 
in  umbels  on  axillary  peduncles  usually  shorter  than  the  leaves.  Sepals  coloured, 
obtuse,  the  inner  ones  fully  3 lines  long.  Petals  twice  as  long.  Anthers  3 or  4 
rather  longer  than  the  others.  Pod  stipitate,  straight,  apparently  about  4 lines 
broad,  but  not  seen  perfect. 

Hab.:  Glen  Ormiston,  Georgina  River,  J.  Coghlan,  who  says  that  the  cattle  have  their  mouths 
dyed  from  feeding  upon  it. 

15.  C.  circinata  (pod  curved  into  a circle),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr. 
384,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  286.  An  erect  bushy  shrub  of  several  feet,  glabrous 
or  hoary  with  a minute  silky  tomentum.  Leaves  all  phyllodineous  without 
leaflets,  or  of  a single  leaflet,  linear-terete,  often  almost  filiform  or  very 
slightly  vertically  flattened,  1 to  l£in.  long,  often  clustered  on  the  nodes  of 
the  previous  year’s  wood,  and  then  sometimes  not  half  so  long ; gland 
none,  or  very  obscure  at  or  above  the  middle  of  the  phyllodium.  Petioles  very 
short,  clothed  with  spreading  white  hairs.  Peduncles  short,  axillary,  bearing 
1 or  2 flowers  on  slender  pedicels.  Bracts  minute.  Sepals  obtuse,  2 to  2^ 
lines  long.  Petals  twice  as  long.  Anthers  2 or  3 rather  larger  than  the  others 
and  on  longer  filaments.  Pod  fully  5 lines  broad,  very  flat  and  thin  as  in  the 
rest  of  the  section,  but  usually  curved  into  a complete  circle. — R.  Br.  in  App. 
Sturt  Exped.  15. 

Hab.:  Balonne  River,  Mitchell;  Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Suttor  River,  D’Orsay ; 
Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallachy  ; Barcoo,  &c. 

16.  C.  phyllodinea  (leaves  without  pinnse),  R.  Br.  in  A])p.  Sturt  Exped.  15; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  287.  An  erect  rigid  bushy  shrub,  hoary  or  white  with  a close 
silky  tomentum.  Leaves  all  phyllodineous,  linear,  vertically  compressed  but 
thick,  obliquely  obtuse  truncate  or  even  shortly  2-lobed  at  the  end,  1 to  lfin. 
long,  narrowed  at  the  base ; gland  none,  or  a faint  one  on  the  upper  edge. 
Peduncles  short,  axillary,  bearing  a very  short  raceme  of  several  flowers  on  slender 


Cassia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


461 


pedicels.  Bracts  very  small.  Sepals  obtuse,  2 to  lines  long.  Petals  twice  as 

long.  Anthers  2 or  3 rather  larger  than  the  others.  Pod  stipitate,  straight  or 
slightly  curved,  5 to  6 lines  broad,  obtuse. 

Hab.:  Bulloo  and  Wilson  Rivers,  F.  C.  Weale : Charlotte  Plains,  IF.  A.  E.  Ivory. 

F.  v.  Mueller  is  disposed  to  consider  this  and  the  preceding  phyllodineous  species,  together  with 
the  five  following  ones,  as  forms  of  one  species,  and  it  is  true  that  we  occasionally  meet  with 
specimens  apparently  connecting  them,  but  so  it  is  with  the  whole  of  the  section  from  C.  glauca 
to  G.  circinata,  which  we  certainly  should  not  be  justified  in  uniting.  Those  specimens  of  C. 
eremophila,  var.  platypoda,  in  which  the  lower  leaves  are  phyllodineous  without  leaflets,  can 
generally  if  not  always  be  distinguished  from  C.  phyllodinea  by  the  glands  at  the  end  of  the 
phyllodia  where  the  leaflets  have  aborted. — Benth. 

17.  C.  eremophila  (a  desert  species)  (by  a clerical  error  nemophila),  A. 
Cunn.  in  Yoy.  Syn.  Cass.  47  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  287.  An  erect  bushy  shrub, 
glabrous  or  slightly  hoary  but  never  so  white  as  some  of  the  allied  species. 
Leaflets  1 or  2 pairs,  very  narrow-linear,  thick,  terete  and  channelled  above  or 
slightly  flattened  out,  sometimes  very  short,  usually  about  lin.  long,  and  often 
more,  the  petiole  terete  or  vertically  flattened  ; gland  depressed  between  the  lowest 
or  the  only  pair ; the  lower  leaves  sometimes  reduced  to  a flattened  phyllodium 
with  the  gland  at  the  end  where  the  leaflets  have  aborted.  Peduncles  short,  or 
rarely  as  long  as  the  leaves,  bearing  a short  almost  corymbose  raceme  of  several 
flowers  on  slender  pedicels.  Bracts  very  small.  Sepals  obtuse,  rarely  2 lines 
long.  Petals  usually  more  than  twice  as  long.  Anthers  2 or  3 lower  ones  rather 
larger  or  on  longer  filaments  than  the  others.  Pod  straight  or  slightly  curved,  3 
to  4 lines  broad  or  rarely  more. — R.  Br.  in  App.  Sturt  Exp.  14  ; C.  canaliculata, 
R.  Br.  l.c.;  C.  heteroloba,  Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Three  Exped.  ii.  122. 

Hub.:  On  the  Maranoa,  Mitchell;  desert  of  the  Suttor  and  Burdekin,  F.  v.  Mueller;  St. 
George,  Jos.  IVedd ; Blackall,  It.  A.  Ranking;  Diamantina,  Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft. 

A very  variable  species,  of  which  specimens  occur  occasionally  with  here  and  there  an 
additional  pair  of  leaflets,  showing  an  approach  towards  C.  artemisioides,  and  some  of  the  western 
ones  with  the  gland  rather  more  prominent  are  at  first  sight  like  reduced  forms  of  C. 
Chatelainiana.  The  two  following  varieties,  which  have  been  distinguished  as  species,  are  very 
inconstant ; they  both  occur  mixed  with  the  common  form. — Bentli. 

Var.  platypoda.  Petioles  vertically  compressed,  the  lower  ones  often  without  leaflets. — C. 
platypoda , R.  Br.  in  App.  Sturt  Exped.  15. 

Var.  zygophyllu.  A shrub  of  about  6ft.  Leaflets  1 or  2 pairs,  linear,  flat,  often  1 to  2 lines 
broad.  — C.  zyyopliylla,  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  288. 

18.  C.  artemisiodes  (Southernwood-like),  Gaud,  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  495  ; 
Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  288.  An  erect  bushy  shrub,  hoary  or  white  with  a minute 
silky  tomentum.  Leaflets  3 to  6 pairs,  linear-terete  and  more  or  less  channelled 
above,  slender  but  rigid,  usually  f to  lin.  long,  but  sometimes  longer  or  shorter; 
glands  small  and  flat  between  those  of  the  lower  1 or  2 pairs.  Flowers  in  a short 
dense  raceme  on  peduncles  much  shorter  than  the  leaves.  Bracts  small,  ovate. 
Sepals  obtuse,  2 to  2f  lines  long.  Petals  about  twice  as  long.  Anthers  2 or  3 
longer  than  the  others  on  longer  filaments.  Pod  straight,  2 to  3in.  long,  about 
4 lines  broad. — C.  teretifolia,  Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Three  Exped.  i.  289  ; C.  teretiuscula, 
F.  v.  M.  in  Linnaea,  xxv.  389. 

Hab.:  Dawson  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Mt.  Maria,  Warrego. 

Nearly  allied  to  C.  eremophila  and  C.  Sturtii,  this  differs  from  the  former  chiefly  in  the  more 
numerous  leaflets,  from  the  latter  in  their  shape  and  in  the  narrower  pod.  If  the  three  were 
united,  it  is  the  name  of  C.  artemisioides  that  has  the  priority. — Benth. 

19.  C.  Sturtii  (after  Capt.  C.  Sturt),  11.  Br.  in  App.  Sturt  F.rped.  14  ; 
Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  288.  A bushy  shrub,  glabrous  or  more  frequently  glaucous 
hoary  or  white  with  a close  tomentum.  Leaflets  usually  3 to  5 pairs,  linear, 
lanceolate,  cuneate,  elliptical  or  almost  obovate,  1 to  lin.  long,  thick,  flat  or 
concave,  sometimes  all  small  and  almost  ovate,  the  lower  leaves  rarely  with  only 
2 pairs ; glands  small  between  the  leaflets  of  the  lowest  1 or  2 pairs.  Stipules 


462 


XLI11.  LEGUMlNOSiE. 


[ Cassia . 

small  and  deciduous  as  in  all  the  allied  species.  Flowers  in  short  axillary  dense 
racemes  as  in  C.  eremophila,  but  usually  more  numerous  on  a longer  peduncle. 
Sepals  obtuse,  2 to  3 lines  long,  frequently  tomentose.  Petals  twice  as  long.  Pod 
when  perfect  fully  ^in.  broad,  straight  or  slightly  curved  and  very  obtuse. 

Hub.:  Suttor  River,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Georgina  River. 

20.  C.  desolata  (a  desert  species),  F.  v.  M.  in  Linnaa,  xxv.  389 ; Bentlu 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  289.  Shrubby,  tbe  young  parts  hoary  or  white,  becoming  glabrous 
with  age.  Leaflets  1,  2 or  very  rarely  3 pairs,  ovate  obovate  or  broadly  oblong,  i 
to  lin.  long  or  more,  coriaceous  ; gland  depressed  between  those  of  tbe  lowest  or  of 
both  pairs,  rarely  wanting.  Flowers  in  a very  short  raceme,  on  short  axillary 
peduncles.  Bracts  ovate,  concave.  Sepals  about  3 lines  long,  usually  pubescent 
or  tomentose.  Petals  twice  as  long.  Anthers  nearly  equal  or  2 or  3 lower  ones 
scarcely  longer.  Pod  not  seen  perfect,  but  apparently  more  like  that  of  C.  Sturtii 
than  of  C.  oligophylla . 

Hab.:  Inland  districts. 

Some  of  the  specimens  are  very  doubtful  and  may  belong  to  C.  oligophylla,  which  this  species 
closely  resembles  in  foliage  and  flowers ; and  it  would  require  more  perfect  materials  than  I 
have  seen  to  establish  satisfactorily  the  distinction  between  this  species  and  C.  Sturtii  on  the  one 
hand  and  C.  oligophrjlla  on  the  other. — Benth. 

21.  C.  oligophylla  (few-leaved),  F.  v.  M.  Fragtn.  iii.  49  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  289.  A tall  shrub,  glabrous  or  minutely  pubescent.  Leaflets  2 or  rarely  only 
1 pair,  broadly  obovate,  very  obtuse,  f to  lin.  long,  coriaceous  ; glands  depressed 
and  rather  large  between  those  of  each  pair.  Flowers  in  short  dense  racemes  on 
axillary  peduncles,  rather  more  numerous  than  in  the  preceding  species,  with 
rather  larger  oblong  or  lanceolate  bracts.  Sepals  obtuse,  pubescent,  about  3 lines 
long.  Petals  not  twice  as  long.  Anthers  2 or  3 lower  ones  rather  longer  than 
the  others.  Pod  2 to  2iin.  long,  nearly  fin.  broad,  very  obtuse. 

Hab.:  Gulf  country,  Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft;  Georgina  River,  E.  J.  Whelan;  sandy  plains,  Nichol 
Bay,  F.  Gregory’s  Expedition. 

From  the  few  specimens  gathered,  this  appears  to  be  closely  allied  to  C.  desolata,  differing 
chiefly  in  the  pod  twice  as  broad  as  in  C.  artemisioides,  half  as  broad  again  as  in  C.  Sturtii  and 
probably  as  in  C.  desolata,  but  better  specimens  are  required  to  confirm  the  species. — Benth. 

22.  C.  oligoclada  (branches  few),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  49;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  289.  A shrub  of  1 to  3ft.,  softly  pubescent  in  all  its  parts.  Leaflets  3 
or  4 pairs,  or  in  slender  starved  specimens  only  1 or  2 pairs,  elliptical-oblong, 
obtuse  or  almost  acute,  shortly  mucronate,  f to  lin.  long ; glands  none. 
Stipules  small,  setaceous.  Flowers  4 to  6,  umbellate,  on  slender  axillary 
peduncles,  about  as  long  as  the  leaves  ; pedicels  almost  filiform.  Bracts  minute, 
deciduous.  Sepals  obtuse,  the  largest  about  2 lines  long.  Petals  twice  as  long 
or  the  upper  inner  ones  rather  less.  Anthers  3 a little  larger  than  the  others. 
Pod  stipitate,  falcate,  pubescent,  1 to  l^in.  long  and  about  4 lines  broad.  Seeds 
4 to  6,  on  very  short  funicles. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 

The  short  broad  falcate  pod  of  this  species  reminds  one  at  first  sight  of  that  of  the 
Sennas. — Benth. 

23.  C.  leptoclada  (branches  slender),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  290.  A shrub  of 
3 or  4ft.,  glabrous  and  very  glaucous,  with  very  slender  often  purplish  branches. 
Leaflets  2 pairs,  obovate  to  oblong-elliptical,  very  obtuse  and  sometimes  emargi- 
nate,  those  of  the  upper  pair  £ to  lin.  long,  of  the  lower  pair  smaller  or  wanting 
in  the  lower  leaves ; glands  small,  ovoid,  between  those  of  each  pair.  Stipules 
very  minute.  Peduncles  in  the  upper  axils  very  short,  bearing  2 flowers  on 
filiform  pedicels,  or  sometimes  the  peduncle  adnate  to  the  branch,  the  pedicels 
then  proceeding  from  a little  above  the  axil.  Sepals  obtuse,  not  2 lines  long. 


Cassia.\ 


XL1II.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


463 


Petals  deep  yellow,  above  4 lines  long.  Anthers  2 or  3 rather  larger  than  the 
others.  Pod  stipitate,  flat  and  glabrous,  either  nearly  orbicular  and  1 -seeded,  or 
2-seeded  and  about  Jin.  long  and  4 lines  broad. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown  (Herb.  R.  Br.) 

Section  V.  Absus. — Sepals  usually  obtuse.  Stamens  5 to  10,  all  perfect  and 
similar,  the  anthers  opening  in  slits  either  short  and  terminal  or  extending  down 
the  sides  of  the  cells.  Pod  flat,  oblique  and  obliquely  acute.  Seeds  lying 
vertically  in  the  pod.  Herbs  or  (in  species  not  Australian)  shrubs,  often 

glandular-pubescent.  Flowers  in  simple  terminal  racemes,  becoming  sometimes 
lateral  by  the  elongation  of  the  branch. 

24.  C.  Absus  (supposed  to  be  after  a river  of  that  name  in  Palestine), 

Linn.  ; Vog.  Syn.  Cass.  50 ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  290.  “ Chichm  ” or 

“Cismatan.”  A viseidly  pubescent  much-branched  annual  or  biennial,  rarely 
exceeding  1ft.  Leaflets  2 pairs,  obliquely  and  broadly  obovate,  obtuse,  J to  lin. 
long  or  rarely  more,  the  common  petiole  rather  long  and  slender  ; glands  small 
between  the  leaflets  of  the  lowest  or  of  both  pairs.  Stipules  narrow.  Flowers 
small,  in  short  terminal  or  at  length  lateral  racemes.  Bracts  small,  reflexed. 
Sepals  narrow,  obtuse,  pubescent,  about  3 lines  long.  Petals  scarcely  longer. 
Stamens  usually  5.  Style  dilated  at  the  end,  with  a rather  broad  fringed  stigma. 
Pod  1 to  ljin.  long  and  about  Jin.  broad.  Seeds  with  very  little  albumen. — 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  50. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown  ; Bustard  Bay,  Banks  and  Solander  ; Port 
Denison,  Fitzalan ; Bowen  River,  Bowman;  Walsh  River,  T.  Barclay -Millar ; Gladstone, 
C.  Hedley. 

The  species  is  common  in  tropical  Asia  and  Africa. 

Section  VI.  Chaieeckista. — Sepals  obtuse  or  acute.  Stamens  5 to  10,  all 
perfect ; anthers  opening  in  slits  either  short  and  terminal  or  extending  more  or 
less  down  the  sides  of  the  cells.  Pod  linear,  flat,  straight  or  falcate.  Seeds 
lying  vertically  in  the  pod.  Herbs  or  undershrubs.  Peduncles  axillary, 
1 -flowered,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together. 

25.  C.  pumila  (small),  Lam.;  Voy.  Syn.  Cass.  65  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  290. 
A diffuse,  more  or  less  pubescent  perennial  of  short  duration,  wflth  a hard  almost 
woody  base,  the  stems  rarely  exceeding  1ft.  Leaflets  much  fewer  than  in  C. 
mimosoides,  in  the  Australian  specimens  usually  8 to  12  pairs,  linear-falcate,  2 to 
3 lines  long ; gland  stipitate  on  the  petiole  below  the  lowest  pair.  Pedicels 
axillary,  solitary,  shorter  than  the  leaves,  with  minute  bracteoles  above  the 
middle.  Sepals  rather  obtuse,  about  2 lines  long.  Petals  scarcely  exceeding  the 
sepals.  Stamens  5,  nearly  equal,  obtuse.  Style  short,  slightly  thickened  at 
the  end,  with  a broadly  peltate  stigma.  Pod  narrow,  1 to  ljin.  long,  oblique 
or  slightly  curved. 

Hab.:  Port  Curtis,  M'Gillivray  ; Bowen  River,  Bowman. 

Pedicels  longer  than  in  the  Indian  specimens,  but  the  style  and  other  essential  characters  are 
quite  the  same. — Bentli. 


26.  C.  concinna  (neat),  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  291.  A diffuse  perennial, 
woody  at  the  base,  more  or  less  pubescent,  with  the  habit  of  C.  pumila,  but  at 
once  known  by  the  much  larger  flowers  and  by  the  style.  Leaflets  8 to  10  or 
rarely  12  to  15  pairs,  rather  crowded,  linear-falcate,  mucronate,  2 to  3 lines  long; 
gland  stipitate  below  the  lowest  pair.  Peduncles  1 -flowered,  solitary,  usually 
longer  than  the  leaves,  with  minute  bracteoles  at  or  above  the  middle.  Sepals  3 
lines  long,  obtuse  or  minutely  mucronate.  Petals  nearly  twice  as  long.  Stamens 


464 


XLI1I.  LEGUMlNOSzE. 


[Cassia. 


5 ; anthers  nearly  equal.  Style  incurved,  not  thickened,  with  a small  terminal 
stigma.  Pod  rarely  above  lin.  long,  about  2 lines  wide. — C.  pumila,  F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  iii.  47,  not  of  Lam. 

Hab.:  Keppel  Islands,  M'Gillivray  ; Wide  Bay,  Bidwill ; Broadsound,  Bowman;  Rockhampton, 
Thozet , Dallachy ; Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart ; Brisbane  River. 

27.  C.  mimosoides  (Mimosa-like),  Linn.:  Vo;/.  Syn.  Cass.  68  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  291.  An  annual  or  perennial  of  short  duration,  with  a hard  almost 
woody  base  and  numerous  diffuse  or  ascending  wiry  stems,  of  1 to  2ft.  or  rarely 
more,  usually  pubescent.  Leaves  1^  to  2in.  long;  leaflets  numerous  (20  to  50 
pairs),  linear-falcate,  mucronate,  seldom  above  2 lines  long  ; gland  depressed, 
below  the  lowest  pair.  Pedicels  axillary,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together,  unequal,  but 
rarely  above  |in.  long.  Sepals  very  acute,  above  3 lines  long.  Petals  3 to  4 or 
rarely  5 lines  long.  Stamens  7 to  10  ; anthers  all  similar,  but  rather  unequal  in 
size.  Style  slightly  dilated  at  the  end  with  a truncate  stigma.  Pod  1^  to  2in. 
long,  scarcely  2 lines  broad,  oblique  or  slightly  curved. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  48. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Broadsound  and  Northumberland  Islands,  R.  Brown  ; 
common  in  the  colony  in  moist  pastures,  A.  Cunningham , F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others. 

82.  PETALOSTYLES,  R.  Br. 

(Style  petal-like.) 

Sepals  5,  much  imbricate,  somewhat  unequal,  scarcely  connected  at  the  base. 
Petals  5,  spreading,  nearly  equal.  Stamens  3 perfect ; filaments  very  short ; 
anthers  linear,  the  cells  opening  inwardly  in  longitudinal  slits;  2 small  staminodia, 
with  acuminate  imperfect  anthers.  Ovary  nearly  sessile,  with  several  ovules ; 
style  large  and  petal-like,  saccate  immediately  above  the  ovary,  with  3 erect  lobes, 
2 short  ones  in  front,  the  other  much  longer,  concave,  the  midrib  prominent 
inside  and  terminating  at  the  top  in  a small  stigma.  Pod  flat,  oblong-linear, 
oblique,  2-valved.  Seeds  ovate-oblong,  compressed ; testa  shining ; funicle 
expanded  into  a fleshy  appendage  distinct  from  the  seed  ; albumen  copious ; coty- 
ledons flat. — Shrubs.  Leaves  simply  pinnate.  Flowers  yellow,  on  axillary 

peduncles. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species,  endemic  in  Australia,  very  nearly  allied  to  Cassia 
(sect.  Chamacrista)  and  to  Labicliea,  but  distinguished  especially  by  the  very  singular  style. — 
Benth. 

1.  P.  labicheoides  (Labichea-like),  Ii.  Br.  in  App.  Sturt  Exped.  17  ; Bcntli' 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  292.  An  erect,  bushy,  nearly  glabrous,  somewhat  glaucous  shrub 
of  several  feet,  the  young  shoots  minutely  silky.  Leaflets  from  about  11  to  above 
30,  mostly  alternate  along  the  rhachis  with  an  odd  terminal  one,  narrow-oblong, 
mucronate,  J to  fin.  long,  narrowed  at  the  base  but  not  oblique,  thick,  somewhat 
concave,  the  midrib  only  conspicuous  underneath.  Stipules  narrow  and  very 
deciduous.  Peduncles  axillary,  1 -flowered,  with  2 small  very  deciduous  brac- 
teoles.  Sepals  acute,  |ln.  long,  green  and  glabrous.  Petals  obovate,  nearly  fin. 
long.  Ovules  4 to  6.  Style  deep  yellow,  like  the  petals,  and  not  much  shorter. 
Pod  1 to  l^in.  long. 

Hab.:  Leichhardt  and  Barcoo  ; Ruttor  Range  (rare),  F.  v.  Mueller. 

Var.  cassioides.  Leaflets  smaller,  numerous,  obovate  or  oblong,  obtuse  or  retuse. — Gulf  of 
Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller ; and  country  towards  Lake  Nash,  M.  Costello. 

83.  LABICHEA,  Gaudich. 

(After  M.  Labiche.) 

Sepals  4 or  5,  much  imbricate,  somewhat  unequal,  scarcely  connected  at  the 
base.  Petals  as  many  as  sepals,  spreading,  nearly  equal.  Stamens  2 ; filaments 
very  short ; anthers  oblong-linear,  opening  in  terminal  pores,  either  both  alike  or 
one  of  them  produced  into  a tube  exceeding  the  other  and  filled  with  pollen  at  the 


Labichea.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


465 


base  only.  Ovary  sessile  or  shortly  stipitate,  with  2 or  rarely  3 ovules,  tapering 
into  a short  style,  with  a small  terminal  stigma.  Pod  oblong  or  lanceolate, 
oblique,  flat,  2-valved.  Seeds  obovate  or  oblong,  with  a hard  shining  testa  ; 
funicle  in  the  species  examined  expanded  below  the  top  into  a globular  fleshy 
appendage  ; albumen  copious  ; cotyledons  flat. — Shrubs  or  undershrubs.  Leaves 
unequally  pinnate,  or  from  the  common  petiole  not  being  developed  consisting  of 
8 or  5 digitate  leaflets  or  reduced  to  the  terminal  leaflet.  Stipules  small, 
deciduous.  Flowers  yellow,  few  together,  in  short  loose  axillary  racemes.  Bracts 
small  and  deciduous.  Bracteoles  none. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia,  and  is  very  nearly  allied  to  Cassia. — Benth. 

Sepals  5.  Petals  5.  Anthers  unequal.  Leaflets  digitate,  without  any 

common  petiole 1 . L.  nitida. 

Sepals  4.  Petals  4.  Bushy  shrub.  Leaves  simple  or  digitate.  Anthers 

equal 2.  L.  rupestris. 

Leaflets  oblong,  blunt,  minutely  apiculate,  one  anther  twice  as  long  as  the 

other 3.  L.  Buettneriana. 

1.  la.  nitida  (shining),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  293,  and  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  x.  7. 

A rigid  shrub,  with  divaricate  slightly  pubescent  branches.  Leaflets  usually  5, 
digitate,  without  a common  petiole,  from  obovate-oblong  to  elliptical,  obtuse  with 
a pungent  point,  coriaceous  and  shining  above,  the  central  one  J to  ljin.  long, 
the  lateral  ones  smaller,  all  shortly  petiolulate.  Racemes  short  and  loose. 
Flowers  much  larger  than  in  L.  rupestris.  Sepals  5,  about  4 lines  long.  Petals 
5,  the  lower  ones  frilly  Jin.  long,  the  upper  ones  rather  smaller.  One  anther  3 
lines  long  or  at  least  half  as  long  again  as  the  other,  linear-cylindrical.  Ovary 
very  villous,  with  3 ovules  in  the  flowers  examined.  Pod  lanceolate  oval, 
about  lin.  long,  compressed  and  slightly  pubescent.  Seeds  4,  turgid  ovate,  dark- 
brown.  Strophiole  pale  depressed-globose  f line. 

Hab.:  Bockingham  Bay  and  Hinchinbrook  Island. 

2.  L.  rupestris  (found  upon  rocks),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  342,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  293.  A small  hard  bushy  shrub,  the  branches  pubescent  or  at 
length  glabrous.  Leaflets  in  some  specimens  mostly  3-foliolate,  the  terminal  one 
linear-oblong,  1 to  2in.  long,  coriaceous,  with  a pungent  point,  the  lateral  ones 
much  smaller,  in  other  specimens  most  or  all  digitate,  with  3 or  5 less  unequal 
leaflets,  without  any  common  petiole.  Racemes  short  dense  and  few-flowered. 
Sepals  4,  about  2J  lines  long.  Petals  about  the  same  length.  Anthers  both 
nearly  of  the  same  size,  scarcely  shorter  than  the  petals.  Ovules  2.  Pod  short, 
acuminate,  frequently  1 -seeded  only,  but  not  seen  ripe. — L.  digitata,  Benth.  in 
Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  273. 

Hab.:  Sandstone  rocks  and  ravines  about  Mount  Pluto,  Mitchell;  Newcastle  Bange,  F.  v. 
Mueller  (in  leaf  only). 

The  two  forms  I had  distinguished,  with  1-foliolate  or  very  unequally  3-foliolate  leaves,  and 
with  nearly  equal  5-foliolate  leaves,  may  be  found  on  diiferent  branches  of  the  same  specimen. — 
Benth. 

3.  I,.  Buettneriana  (after  Dr.  Alex.  Buettner),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  xii.  18, 
and  Chon,  and  Drugg.,  June  1882.  Plant  erect,  branches  slender,  thinly  silky. 
Leaves  pinnate,  petioles  very  short,  leaflets  3 to  11,  oval  oblong,  minutely 
apiculate,  reticulate-veined  above,  silky  beneath  ; stipules  fugaceous.  Racemes 
usually  many  flowered,  2 to  5in.  long  on  short  peduncles.  Bracts  and  bracteoles 
of  about  equal  length,  lanceolate,  one-third  the  length  of  the  calyx.  Sepals  4, 
about  5 lines  long,  outer  lanceolate-cymbiform,  inner  falcate-lanceolate,  mem- 
branous. Petals  4,  yellow,  obovate,  cuneate  at  the  base.  Filaments  very  short. 
Anthers  yellow,  alternately  long  and  short.  Style  setaceous,  glabrous,  1J  line 
long.  Stigma  very  minute,  ovary  densely  silky. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  Biver,  Persieli  (F.  v.  M.,  who  says  that  this  species  may  be  easily 
distinguished  from  others  of  Australia  by  the  shape  and  bluntness  of  its  leaflets). 


466 


XL11I.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


84.  BAUHINIA,  Linn. 

(After  the  brothers  Bauhin,  botanists  of  the  fifteenth  century.) 

Sepals  united  at  the  base  into  a short  or  long  disk-bearing  tube,  the  free  part 
separating  into  5 or  fewer  valvate  or  induplicate  lobes.  Petals  5,  inserted  at  the 
summit  of  the  tube,  usually  clawed,  more  or  less  unequal.  Stamens  10,  free, 
either  all  perfect  or  some  reduced  to  small  staminodia.  Ovary  stipitate,  the  stalk 
adnate  to  one  side  of  the  calyx-tube,  with  several  ovules  ; style  usually  filiform, 
with  a capitate,  broad  or  oblique,  terminal  stigma.  Pod  linear  or  oblong,  com- 
pressed, 2-valved.  Seeds  compressed  ; albumen  usually  thin  ; radicle  short  and 
straight. — Trees  or  woody  climbers.  Leaflets  either  2 distinct  from  the  base,  or 
(in  the  majority  of  species  not  Australian)  united  into  an  entire  or  2-lobed  leaf, 
with  5 to  11  digitate  nerves.  Racemes  terminal. 

A large  geuus,  distributed  over  the  tropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World.  It  has 
been  divided  into  several  genera,  which  I have  in  other  works  been  disposed  to  adopt ; 
but  it  may  be  more  convenient  to  follow  De  Candolle  and  others  in  considering  them  as  sub- 
genera.— Benth. 

Sect.  I.  Pauletia,  Cav. — Fertile  stamen s 10.  Calyx  with  a very  short  tube  and  spathaceoiis 
limb.  Pud  narrow,  dehiscent. — Erect  shrubs,  with  large  showy  J lowers  and  connate  leaflets. — J.  G. 
Baker. 

Flowers  in  close  axillary  racemes.  Petals  as  long  as  the  calyx-limb, 
which  is  cleft  into  5 subulate  teeth  at  the  tip.  Pod  with  a rib  on  each 
side  of  the  upper  suture 1.  B.  acuminata. 

Sect.  II.  Xaysiphyllum,  Benth. — Fertile  stamens  10.  Calyx  ivith  a lung  tube  and  5-cleft 


limb.  Pod  broad,  indehiscent.  Leaflets  distinct. 

Calyx  disk-bearing  base  very  short,  free  part  campanulate,  deeply  lobed. 

Outer  petals  -5  to  6 lines  long.  Pod  2in.  broad 2.  B.  Cunninghamii. 

Calyx  disk-bearing  base  turbinate,  free  part  as  long,  shortly  lobed.  Petals 

(5  or  7 lines  long.  Pod  1 to  lfin.  broad 3.  B.  Carronii. 

Calyx  disk-bearing  base  cylindrical,  free  part  as  long,  divided  to  the  base. 

Outer  petals  ljin.  long.  Pod  1 to  ljin.  broad 4.  B.  Hookeri. 

Sect.  III.  Casparea,  DC. — Calyx-tube  fusiform;  limb  spathaceoiis. 

Fertile  stamen  1 5.  B.  monandra. 


1.  S.  acuminata  (calyx  long  pointed),  Linn.;  Baker  in  FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii. 

276.  An  erect  shrub,  with  obscurely  downy  angular  branches.  Leaves  slightly 
cordate,  flexible,  3 to  6in.  long,  9 to  11-nerved ; the  lobes  acute  or  subobtuse,  not 
reaching  half-way  down,  at  first  finely  pubescent  beneath.  Racemes  axillary, 
shortly  pedunculate,  corymbose  ; pedicels  erecto-patent,  6 to  9 lines  long,  with 
linear-subulate  bracts  and  bracteoles.  Calyx  1 to  lfin.,  narrowed  into  a long 
point,  cleft  at  the  tip.  Petals  oblong,  whitish.  Style,  fin.  Pod  4 to  5in.  long 

and  about  fin.  broad,  firm,  glabrous,  8 to  12-seeded  ; stalk  fin.  long. 

Hab.:  India,  China,  Malay  Isles,  and  Queensland,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

2.  B.  Cunninghamii  (after  A.  Cunningham),  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  295. 
A tree  of  20ft.  or  more,  the  young  branches  slender,  rarely  short  and  spinescent, 
the  young  shoots  and  leaves  pubescent,  at  length  glabrous.  Leaflets  quite 
distinct,  broadly  falcate-ovate,  very  obtuse,  f to  lfin.  long,  and  more  than  half 
as  broad,  finely  5 to  7-nerved.  Flowers  2 or  3 together  on  a very  short  common 
peduncle,  the  pedicels  shorter  than  the  calyx.  Calyx  about  5 lines  long,  velvety- 
tomentose,  the  disk-bearing  base  very  short  and  broad,  the  free  part  broadly 
campanulate,  thick,  divided  below  the  middle  into  5 ovate  equal  lobes.  Petals 
silky-tomentose,  ovate,  the  2 outer  lower  ones  exceeding  the  calyx  by  above  3 
lines,  the  lateral  ones  by  about  2 lines,  and  the  uppermost  inner  one  scarcely  at 
all.  Stamens  10,  longer  than  the  petals,  the  lowest  the  longest.  Ovary  on  a 
long  stipes,  with  8 to  10  ovules ; stigma  large  capitate.  Pod  very  flat,  thinly 


Bavhinia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


467 


coriaceous,  about  2in.  broad,  6iu.  long  or  shorter  according  to  the  number  of 
seeds  ripened. — Phanera  Cunninyhamii,  Benth.  in  PL  Jungh.  i.  264  ; Bauhinia 
Leichhardtii,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  iii.  50,  partly. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  in  Mueller’s  Census  of  Austr.  Plants. 


3.  B.  Carronii  (after  W.  Carron),  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  iii.  49  ; 

Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  295.  “ Pegunny  ” and  “ Thalmera,”  Cloncurry,  Palmer. 

A tree,  with  the  foliage  and  inflorescence  of  B.  Cunninghamii,  or  with  rather 
narrower  leaflets,  but  undistinguishable  without  the  flowers  or  fruit,  both  of 
which  are  narrower.  Calyx  slightly  tomentose,  about  Jin.  long,  the  disk- 
bearing base  narrow-turbinate,  the  free  portion  about  the  same  length,  very 
shortly  5-lobed.  Petals  obovate,  silky  outside,  the  lower  ones  exceeding  the 
calyx  by  about  5 lines,  the  others  rather  shorter.  Stamens  and  pistil  of  B. 
Cunnini/hamii.  Pod  coriaceous,  not  quite  ljin.  broad,  the  valves  'coriaceous, 
slightly  convex  when  ripe. 

Hab.:  On  the  Burdekin,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; in  the  interior,  Mitchell;  Georgina  River. 

Wood  light-brown,  becoming  much  darker  towards  the  centre,  hard,  heavy,  with  a close  grain  ; 
suitable  for  cabinet-work. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  125. 

Some  specimens  of  Leichhardt’s,  in  leaf  only  and  therefore  not  determinable,  referred  by 
F.  v.  Mueller  to  the  preceding  species,  appear  to  me  rather  to  belong  to  the  present  one. — Benth. 

4.  B.  Hookeri  (after  Sir  W.  J.  Hooker),  F.  v.  M.  in.  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  iii. 
51  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  296.  A large  tree,  with  a spreading  head,  usually 
quite  glabrous.  Leaflets  quite  distinct,  very  obliquely  and  broadly  ovate  or 
obovate,  very  obtuse,  f to  ljin.  long,  finely  5 to  7-nerved,  with  a small  thick 
point  terminating  the  petiole  between  them.  Flowers  white,  edged  with  crimson, 
few  in  short  terminal  racemes,  the  pedicels  very  short.  Calyx  glabrous  or  nearly 
so,  lin.  long  or  even  more,  the  disk-bearing  base  narrow-cylindrical,  the  free  part 
about  as  long,  dividing  nearly  to  the  base  into  5 narrow  lobes.  Petals  clawed, 
ovate  nearly  equal,  the  lamina  neai’ly  ljin.  long,  slightly  villous  outside  near  the 
base.  Stamens  10,  rather  longer  than  the  petals.  Ovary  on  a long  stipes ; 
stigma  large  Pod  stipitate,  flat,  1 to  If  in.  broad. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  R.  Brown;  Gilbert  River,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Suttor  River,  D'Orsay;  Rock- 
hampton, Dallachy  ; islands  of  Torres  Straits,  Henne. 

Var.  puherula.  Young  shoots  slightly  pubescent.  Calyx  tomentose,  the  free  part  shorter  than 
the  disk-bearing  base.  Pod  large  and  broad.— Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

The  latter  specimens  come  very  near  to  B.  ( Phanera j Blanqoi,  Benth.  in  PI.  Jungh.  i.  264, 
which  we  have  from  Siam  and  from  the  Philippine  Islands,  and  of  which  B.  Hookeri  may  prove 
to  be  a variety  only. — Benth. 

Wood,  the  outer  of  a light-brown,  the  inner  dark-brown,  nicely  marked,  hard,  heavy,  and 
close-grained;  very  suitable  for  cabinet-work. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  126. 

Yields  a brownish-yellow  gum,  which  can  be  used  like  arabie  gum  if  soaked  in  water  for  some 
time.  It  contains  12%  of  arabin  and  67%  of  metarabin. — Lauterer. 

5.  B.  monandra  (only  one  fertile  stamen),  Kurz,  F.  v.  M.  in  Census  of 
Austr.  PL  Leaflets  1 to  ljin  long,  almost  ovate,  semi-orbicular,  connate  for 
about  two-thirds  of  their  length,  each  with  5 principal  nerves,  glabrous  above, 
pale  beneath,  and  as  well  as  the  branchlets  clothed  with  a short  down.  Stipules 
linear-semilanceolaie.  Flowers  in  corymbs ; rather  large  pedicels  and  slender 
calyx-tube  also  downy;  the  limb  spathaeeous,  J to  fin.  long,  membranous, 
downy  on  the  outside.  Petals  spreading,  membranous,  glabrous,  rhomboid- 
ovate  with  cuneate  elongated  base,  pale-colored,  1 to  lfin.  long,  the  uppermost 
marked  with  numerous  dark-red  spots,  and  its  base  ciliated.  The  upper  petal 
innermost  while  in  the  bud.  The  one  fertile  stamen  glabrous,  about  the  length 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOa®. 


[Bauhinia . 


4(>8 

of  the  petals,  the  sterile  stamens  very  short ; fertile  anther  narrow-oblong,  about 
Jin.  long,  dark  above,  bilobed  at  the  base.  Style  glabrous  ; ovary  shortly  hairy. 
— B.  Pcrsiehii,  F.  v.  M.,  Wing’s  South  Sci.  Rec.  i.  new  series,  Feb.  1885;  B. 
monandra,  Kurz,  Census  of  Austr.  PI.  1889. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River. 

Perhaps  both  B.  acuminata  and  B.  monandra  may  be  only  escapes  from  cultivation,  for  in  the 
large  number  of  plant  specimens  received  by  me  from  northern  Queensland  I have  never  received 
any  portions  of  these  two  plants. 


85.  AFZELIA,  Sm. 

(After  Dr.  Adam  Afzelius,  a Swedish  botanist.) 

Calyx-tube  narrowly  infundibuliform  or  cylindrical,  limb  4-partite,  segments 
entire,  subequal  or  inner  pair  slightly  longer,  imbricate.  Vexillum  exceeding 
(sometimes  many  times)  the  calyx,  clawed,  lamina  bilobate  or  subentire  ; lateral 
and  anterior  petals  minute  or  squamiform  or  none.  Perfect  stamens  7,  filaments 
elongate,  very  shortly  coherent  at  the  base  ; anthers  versatile,  oblong,  dehiscing 
longitudinally,  staminodia  2,  subulate  or  filiform,  one  at  each  side  of  the 
vexillum  ; posterior  stamen  wanting.  Ovary  shortly  stipitate,  narrowed  above 
into  the  slender  style  ; ovules  8 to  10  or  more.  Legume  oblong,  elliptic,  or 
obovate-oblong,  2-valved,  several-seeded ; valves  thick,  woody,  smooth  or  nearly 
so  externally,  with  transverse  cellular  or  spongy  septa  internally  separating  the 
seeds.  Seeds  (in  well-ascertained  species)  large,  oblong  or  ellipsoidal,  smooth, 
black,  with  a large,  cupuliform,  closely  investing  scarlet  or  yellow  arillus  invest- 
ing the  lower  third.  Unarmed  trees.  Leaves  abruptly  pinnate.  Flowers  in 
terminal  simple  or  pannicled  racemes.  Bracteoles  inserted  on  the  pedicel  at  the 
base  of  the  calyx-tube,  shorter  than  the  bud,  caducous  or  falling  by  the  time  of 
expansion. — Oliver  in  FI.  Trop.  Afr  ii.  301. 

A genus  of  about  10  or  12  species  confined  to  the  tropics  of  the  Old  World. 

1.  A.  australis  (Australian),  Bail.  Johnstone  River  Teak.  A lofty 
tree,  attaining  a height  of  over  100ft. , with  an  erect  trunk  over  2ft.  in  diameter; 
bark  covered  by  rather  large  lenticellte,  and  the  bark  of  the  trunk  exfoliating 
by  hard  thick  oval  or  oblong  patches,  similar  to  some  Flindersias  and  the  Red 
Cedar ; wood  very  hard  and  durable,  of  a reddish-brown.  Leaves  alternate, 
glabrous,  of  2 or  3 pairs  of  very  obtuse  nearly  orbicular  leaflets  from  3 to  5in. 
long  and  nearly  as  broad,  very  unequal-sided  at  the  base,  on  petiolules  of  about 
Jin.,  the  divergent  almost  parallel  veins  joining  far  within  the  margin,  and 
forming  an  intramarginal  one,  the  netted  veinlets  numerous  and  somewhat 
prominent.  Flowers  pubescent.  Calyx-tube  ribbed,  about  Jin.  long ; lobes  very 
unequal  and  much  imbricate,  slightly  longer  than  the  tube.  Petal  orbicular, 
undulate,  veined,  on  a claw  about  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  hairy. 
Ovary  stipitate,  flat,  the  edges  tomentose.  Pod  oblong,  6 to  7in.  long  and  over 
2in.  broad,  glabrous,  coriaceous,  with  transverse  veins.  Seeds  dark-brown,  3 or  4, 
very  flat,  more  or  less  covered  by  a mealy  substance,  oblong  or  orbicular,  about 
ljin.  diameter,  the  short  thick  funicle  expanding  into  an  oblong  appressed  aril. 

Hab.:  Johnstone  River,  Dr.  Thor.  L.  Bancroft. 

At  Baron  von  Mueller’s  request  I sent  him  specimens  of  A.  australis,  and  that  gentleman, 
after  comparing  them  with  the  specimens  he  had  some  time  previously  received  from  Queens- 
land and  determined  to  be  identical  with  A.  bijuga,  A.  Gray — and  therefore  mentioned  this  tree 
as  occurring  in  Queensland  in  his  Census  of  Austr.  Plants — sends  me  word  that  both  his  and  my 
specimens  are  the  same  species,  and  that  he  still  considers  the  Australian  tree  A.  bijuga,  an 
opinion  in  which  I cannot  concur,  for,  besides  other  distinctions,  the  bark  is  very  distinct  in  the 


Afzelia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSi®. 


469 


two  trees.  J.  S.  Gamble,  in  his  excellent  work  on  the  Indian  timbers,  page  141,  says  of  A. 
bijuga,  A.  Gray  : Bark  thin,  grey,  peeling  off  in  fine  papery  scrolls.”  This  could  never  be  said 

of  the  Australian  tree ; but  probably  Baron  Mueller  never  saw  the  bark  of  the  Australian  tree. 

Wood  of  a brown  colour,  rather  coarse  in  grain,  hard  and  heavy,  but  easy  to  work,  and  would 
be  well  adapted  for  house-building  work,  or  might  suit  the  cabinet-maker.  The  sawdust  of  the 
Australian  tree  yields  a purplish  dye. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  126a. 

It  was  from  a log  of  this  tree  that  No.  127  in  the  Woods  Catalogue  of  the  Colonial  and  Indian 
Exhibition  was  prepared  in  mistake  for  Cynometra. 


86.  CYNOMETRA,  Linn. 

(Dog’s  womb,  shape  of  pod.) 

Sepals  very  shortly  united  at  the  base,  the  free  part  separating  into  4 imbricate 
segments,  the  upper  one  rather  broader  (consisting  of  2 sepals  ?).  Petals  5, 
oblong-lanceolate,  nearly  equal,  the  upper  one  innermost.  Stamens  10  or  more, 
free  ; filaments  filiform ; anthers  small.  Ovary  nearly  sessile,  with  2 ovules  ; 
style  subulate,  with  a small  terminal  stigma.  Pod  obliquely  and  broadly  semi- 
orbicular,  thick,  fleshy  and  turgid,  2-valved.  Seed  usually  solitary,  thick  ; 
radicle  short,  straight. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  abruptly  pinnate,  with  1,  2 or 
rarely  more  pairs  of  leaflets.  Flowers  small,  usually  reddish,  in  axillary  or  lateral 
clusters  or  short  racemes. 

The  genus  is  distributed  over  the  tropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World.  The  only 
Australian  species  is  a common  Asiatic  one. — Benth. 

1.  C.  ramiflora  (flowering  upon  the  branches),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  509, 
var.  bijuga ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  296.  A tree,  either  glabrous  or  the  young 
shoots  and  inflorescence  rusty-pubescent.  Leaflets  in  the  Australian  specimens  2 
pairs  or  rarely  1 pair  only,  obliquely  obovate-oblong,  very  obtuse  or  shortly  and 
obtusely  acuminate,  coriaceous,  penniveined,  the  terminal  ones  2 to  3in.  long,  the 
lower  ones  smaller.  Flowers  in  very  short  axillary  racemes  or  clusters.  Bracts 
dry,  concave,  at  first  imbricate,  but  very  deciduous.  Pedicels  2 to  3 lines  long. 
Calyx  and  petals  not  2 lines  long.  Stamens  10,  rather  longer.  Ovary  very 
villous.  Fruit  as  broad  as  long,  very  thick  and  fleshy,  \ to  fin.  long  and  very 
rugose  in  the  dried  specimens,  probably  larger  and  smoother  when  fresh. — W.  and 
Arn.  Prod.  i.  293  ; C.  bijuga,  Spanoghe,  in  Miq.  FI.  Ind.  Bat.  i.  part  i.  78. 

Hab.:  Common  amongst  the  mangroves  of  the  tropical  beach. 

Widely  spread  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  most  frequently  with  2 pairs  of  leaves  in 
Ceylon  and  the  Archipelago,  with  1 pair  only  on  the  continent  of  India,  but  the  two  can  scarcely 
be  distinguished,  even  as  varieties. — Benth. 

In  India  the  wood  of  this  tree  is  used  for  house-building,  carts,  &e.,  and  the  chips  are  said  to 
give  in  water  a purple  dye.  Wood  of  a light-brown  colour,  close-grained  and  tough.  — Bailey’s 
Cat.  Ql.  IVoocls  No.  127. 


87.  ERYTHROPHLCEUM,  Afzel. 

(Referring  to  its  red  sap.) 

(Fillasa,  Guillem,  and  Perr.;  Laboucheria,  F.  v.  M.) 

Calyx-teeth  5,  valvate  in  the  bud.  Petals  5,  small,  very  slightly  imbricate. 
Stamens  10,  inserted  with  the  petals  on  a perigynous  disk,  free,  longer  than  the 
petals,  all  equal  and  perfect ; anthers  ovate,  without  glands.  Ovary  stipitate, 
with  several  ovules ; style  short,  with  a terminal  stigma.  Pod  oblong,  linear, 
flat,  coriaceous,  2-valved.  Seeds  ovate,  compressed,  transverse  ; funicle  filiform  ; 
testa  pulpy  outside  ; albumen  thin  ; radicle  short,  straight. — Trees.  Leaves 

bipinna, te.  Flowers  small,  almost  sessile  in  long  cylindrical  spikes,  forming  a 
terminal  panicle.  Bracts  inconspicuous. 

A small  genus,  containing,  besides  the  Australian  species,  which  is  endemic,  two  or  three  from 
tropical  Africa. — Benth. 


470 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[ Erythroph  hrum . 


1.  E.  Laboucherii  (after  M.  Laboucher),  F.  r.  M.  Herb.:  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  297.  “ Ah-pill,”  Mitchell  River,  Palmer;  “ Arriga,”  Palmer  River, 

“ Nau-muta,”  Batavia  River,  Roth.  A hard-wooded  t.ree,  the  branches  and 
foliage  glabrous.  Pinnae  opposite,  in  2 or  8 pairs  ; leaflets  4 to  9,  alternate, 
obliquely  obovate  or  orbicular,  very  obtuse  or  retuse,  mostly  1^  to  2in.  long. 
Spikes  rather  dense,  nearly  sessile,  1 to  Sin.  long.  Flowers  2 to  24  lines  long. 
Calyx  sprinkled  and  ciliate  with  a few  hairs.  Petals  rather  longer  than  the  calyx, 
with  woolly  edges.  Stamens  more  than  twice  as  long  as  the  petals,  distinctly 
inserted  in  two  rows.  Ovary  shortly  stipitate,  hairy,  with  about  10  ovules.  Pod 
4 to  Gin.  long,  1 to  14in.  broad,  flat,  with  thinly-coriaceous  valves.  Seeds  nearly 
orbicular. — Labouclieria  chlorostachys,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  159. 

IIab  : Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Sol  under , 
.4.  Cunningham  ; Burdekin  and  Gilbert  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller ; also  in  Leichhardt’s  collection,  and 
said  to  be  his  Leguminous  Ironbark  Tree.  Seeds  ripe  October. 

Said  by  Mueller  to  contain  Erythrophlcein,  the  active  principle  of  E.  quineense. 

Gum  used  for  cement  and  bark  for  huts. — Both. 

Wood  red,  very  hard  (probably  the  hardest  in  Australia),  close  in  grain  and  very  durable. — 
Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  127a.  Used  for  woomeras  and  also  spear-points,  Palmer  and  Both. 


88.  ENTADA,  Adams. 

(Its  Malabar  name.) 

Calyx  very  shortly  5-toothed.  Petals  5,  valvate,  more  or  less  united  or  free. 
Stamens  10,  shortly  exserted,  free;  anthers  tipped  by  a gland.  Ovary  nearly 
sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; style  filiform,  with  a truncate  stigma.  Pod  large 
and  long,  flat,  coriaceous  or  woody,  the  sutures  thick  and  forming  a persistent 
replum,  the  valves  falling  away  separately  and  divided  transversely  into  1-seeded 
articles,  the  endocarp  separating  from  the  epicarp  and  persisting  round  the  large 
orbicular  flat  seeds. — Tall  woody  climbers,  unarmed.  Leaves  abruptly  bipinnate, 
the  pinnte  of  the  upper  pair  often  converted  into  tendrils  without  leaflets. 
Flowers  small,  sessile  in  long  slender  spikes,  either  solitary  in  the  upper  axils  or 
forming  a terminal  simple  panicle.  Bracts  very  small. 

The  genus  is  common  to  the  New  and  the  Old  World  within  the  tropics.  The  only  Australian 
species  is  the  same  as  the  most  generally  diffused  Asiatic  one.—  Benth. 

1.  XI.  scandens  (climbing),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Journ.  Bot.  iv.  382,  and  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  298.  Matchbox  bean.  “ Barbaddah,”  Cleveland  Bay,  Tliozet ; 
“ Parpangata,”  Batavia  River,  Roth.  A woody  climber,  stretching  over  the 
largest  trees,  the  young  parts  and  inflorescence  slightly  pubescent,  at  length 
glabrous.  Leaves  usually  consisting  of  a common  petiole  of  2 to  6in., 
terminating  in  2 simple  tendrils,  which  are  not  however  always  developed,  and 
bearing  below  them  1 or  2 pairs  of  pinnte  ; leaflets  on  each  pinna  2 or  3 rarely  4 
or  even  5 pairs,  obovate-oblong  obtuse  or  emarginate,  often  very  oblique,  2 to  5in. 
long  when  few,  smaller  when  more  numerous.  Spikes  varying  in  length  from 
1 or  2in.  to  nearly  1ft.  Flowers  about  l^in.  long.  Calyx  very  small,  truncate 
or  minutely  toothed.  Petals  lanceolate,  rigid,  becoming  at  length  quite  separate. 
Gland  of  the  anthers  very  deciduous.  Pod  woody,  attaining  2 to  4ft.  in  length 
and  3 to  4in.  in  breadth.  Seeds  10  to  30,  nearly  2in.  diameter. — Mimosa 
scandens,  Linn.  Sp.  PL  1101  ; Entada  Purscetha,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  425  ; Miq.  FI.  Ind. 
Bat.  i.  part  i.  45. 

Hab.:  From  the  Pioneer  River  to  Cape  York. 

The  species  is  widely  diffused  over  tropical  Asia  and  Africa  and  the  West  Indies,  the  seeds 
being  carried  very  far  by  ocean  currents  without  losing  their  power  of  germination.  The  opinion 
now  generally  adopted  that  the  East  and  West  Indian  species  are  the  same  is,  however,  not 
universally  admitted ; and  our  herbarium  specimens,  numerous  as  they  are,  are  mostly  too 
imperfect,  the  foliage,  flowers,  and  pods  too  rarely  matched  to  determine  the  auestion  with  any 
approach  to  certainty. — Benth. 

Natives  of  North  Queensland  eat  the  beans,  which  are  first  roasted  or  baked,  then  pounded, 
put  in  a dilly-bag,  and  left  for  10  or  12  hours  in  water  before  being  eaten  .-^Palmer. 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


471 


80.  ADENANTHERA,  Linn. 

(Anthers  bearing  a gland.) 

Calyx  5-toothed.  Petals  5,  valvate  in  the  bud,  cohering  at  first,  at  length 
free.  Stamens  10,  free  ; anthers  ovate,  tipped  by  a deciduous  gland.  Ovary 
sessile,  with  several  ovules  ; style  filiform,  with  a small  terminal  stigma.  Pod 
linear,  compressed,  falcate,  2-valved,  the  endocarp  often  forming  more  or  less 
complete  partitions  between  the  seeds  ; valves  somewhat  convex.  Seeds  thick, 
with  a hard,  shining,  red  or  red-and-black  testa,  surrounded  usually  by  a thin 
pulp ; funicle  slightly  thickened ; albumen  scanty  ; radicle  short,  straight. — 
Unarmed  trees.  Leaves  abruptly  bipinnate,  with  several  pairs  of  pinnae  and  of 
leaflets.  Flowers  small,  white  or  yellowish,  always  pedicellate  in  long  spike-like 
racemes,  either  solitary  in  the  axils  or  forming  a simple  terminal  panicle. 

A genus  of  few  species,  natives  of  the  tropical  regions  of  the  Old  World,  one  of  them  intro- 
duced and  now  naturalised  in  the  West  Indies.  It  is  closely  allied  to  Prosopis  and  several  others 
separated  from  Mimosa  and  Acacia,  differing  chiefly  in  the  pedicellate  flowers  and  in  the  seeds 
resembling  those  of  Ormosia,  and  externally  those  of  Abrus,  and  the  original  A.  pavonina,  Linn., 
has  moreover  a remarkably  long  twisting  pod. — Benth. 

Pinnae  8 to  12.  Leaflets  12  to  18,  obtuse.  Seeds  1-coloured,  usually 

bright  red 1.  A.  pavonina. 

Pinnae  about  6.  Leaflets  8 to  12,  oval  or  orbicular-ovate.  Seeds  2-coloured, 

red  and  black 2.  A.  abrosperma. 

1.  A.  pavonina  (peacock-like),  Linn.:  DC.  Prod.  ii.  446.  Red  Sandal- 
wood. A tree  70  to  80ft.  high  (F.  v.  M.)  ; on  the  Mulgrave  I only  saw 
small  trees  30  to  40ft.  high  ; the  young  parts  puberulent.  Leaves  deciduous, 
abruptly  pinnate,  1 to  lift.  long.  Pinnae  about  10,  2 to  5in.  long.  Leaflets 
8 to  14,  oblong,  the  largest  l£in.  long,  lin.  broad,  glaucous  pubescent  beneath. 
Flowers  small,  yellow,  in  terminal  racemose  panicles,  pedicels  minute.  Calyx 
i line  long.  Petals  1 line  long.  Pods  curved,  4 to  6in.  long,  linear,  acuminate  at 
both  ends,  when  ripe  closely  curled,  glabrous  on  the  outside.  Seeds  shining, 
scarlet,  lenticuiate,  compressed,  4 to  5 lines  diameter. 

Hab.:  Mulgrave  River  and  other  tropical  localities. 

S.  Kurz,  Forest  FI.  Brit.  Burma  i.  417,  remarks  : — “ Wood  rather  heavy,  coarse,  fibrous,  light- 
brown  or  yellowish-grey,  turning  brown  at  exposure,  hard  and  close-grained,  soon  attacked  by 
Xylophages ; the  heart-wood  dark-brown,  solid,  hard  and  durable,  suitable  for  cabinet-work. 
Wood  yields  a red  dye.  The  scarlet  seeds  are  used  by  jewellers  for  weights,  also  for 
ornaments,  &c.” 

I have  no  sample  of  the  wood  of  the  Queensland  tree. 

2.  A.  abrosperma  (seeds  like  those  of  Abrus),  V.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  30; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  299.  “Oon-doo,”  Mitchell  River,  Palmer;  “ Rokowara,” 
Palmer  River,  Iioth.  A tree  of  about  36ft.  in  height,  the  trunk  often  having 
a diameter  of  l|ft.  The  young  growth  usually  puberulous.  Leaves  usually 
having  6 pinme  about  3in.  long,  subopposite,  the  common  petiole  2in.  long. 
Leaflets  oblong,  emarginate,  fin.  long,  |in.  broad,  pale  on  the  under  side,  the 
erecto-patent  lateral  nerves,  prominent  on  the  upper  surface,  looping  some 
distance  from  the  margin.  Pod  straight,  scarcely  stipitate,  5in.  long,  fin. 
broad,  very  obtuse,  somewhat  tapering  at  the  base,  thickened  at  the  sutures, 
valves  thick,  very  dark  and  nearly  smooth  outside.  Seeds  8 to  10,  transverse, 
sunk  in  the  substance  of  the  valves  ; funicle  flexuose  under  the  seed.  Seeds 
somewhat  pear-shaped  and  compressed,  about  3^  lines  long,  the  lower  half  red, 
the  upper  black,  very  glossy. 

Hab.:  Near  Musgrave  Telegraph  Station,  Cape  York  Peninsula,  T.  Barclay-Millar,  who 
describes  the  bark  and  leaves  as  very  bitter  ; Mitchell  River,  E.  Palmer ; and  from  the  Gilbert 
to  the  coast  on  sandy  land. 

Wood  close-grained,  very  heavy,  of  a dark-red  colour. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  128, 

Seeds  roasted  in  the  pods  before  being  eaten,  Mitchell  River.  Palmer, 

Bark  thrown  into  water  for  “ poisoning  ” fish. — Both, 

Part  II,  T, 


472 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


90.  NEPTUNIA,  Lour. 

(After  Neptune,  some  species  being  aquatic.) 

Calyx  5-toothed.  Petals  5,  valvate  in  the  bud,  cohering  or  free.  Stamens  in 
the  perfect  flowers  10  or  (in  the  Australian  species)  5,  free  ; anthers  ovate,  tipped 
with  a deciduous  gland,  very  rarely  wanting  ; pollen  granular.  Ovary  stipitate, 
with  2 or  several  ovules  ; style  filiform,  with  a truncate  or  concave  stigma. 
Lower  flowers  of  the  head  male  or  more  frequently  neuter,  with  long  linear 
staminodia.  Pod  short  and  broad,  flat,  turned  downwards,  2-valved,  without 
pulp  inside.  Seeds  transverse,  flattened,  ovate  or  orbicular,  the  funicle  not 
dilated. — Procumbent  or  floating  perennials  or  undershrubs.  Leaves  abruptly 
bipinnate,  with  small  leaflets,  either  without  glands  or  with  a depressed  gland 
below  the  pinnae.  Stipules  membranous,  obliquely  cordate.  Peduncles  axillary, 
usually  with  2 distant  stipule-like  deciduous  bracteoles,  and  bearing  a single 
globular  or  ovoid  flower-head.  Flowers  small,  sessile,  mostly  hermaphrodite,  but 
a few  of  the  lower  ones  either  like  the  others  but  male  by  the  abortion  of  the 
ovary,  or  neuter  with  a smaller  calyx  and  corolla,  and  long  linear  almost  petal-like 
staminodia. 

A small  genus,  widely  diffused  over  the  tropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World, 
extending  also  into  N.  America.  The  two  Australian  species  are  endemic,  and  differ  from  all 
others  in  their  stamens  always  5 only  instead  of  10. — Benth. 

Peduncles  slender,  1 to  3in.  long.  Ovules  several.  Pod  oblong,  with 

several  seeds 1.  N.  gracilis. 

Peduncles  very  short.  Ovules  2.  Pod  orbicular,  1-seeded 2.  N.  monosperma. 

1.  N.  gracilis  (slender),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Journ.  Bot.  iv.  355,  and  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  300.  Stock  perennial,  often  woody,  with  procumbent  or  ascending  stems  of 
about  1ft.  or  rarely  twice  as  long,  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent.  Pinnas  usually 
1 or  2 pairs  ; leaflets  6 to  20  pairs,  oblong-linear,  falcate,  2 to  3 or  rarely  4 lines 
long  ; glands  none  in  the  ordinary  form,  but  small  setaceous  stipellse  under  the 
pinnae.  Stipules  leafy,  obliquely  cordate,  acuminate.  Peduncles  1 to  Sin.  long, 
with  2 broad  cordate  bracteoles,  one  about  the  middle,  the  other  much  lower 
down,  both  very  deciduous.  Flower-head  small,  globular,  with  very  few  of  the 
male  or  neuter  flowers  at  the  base  and  sometimes  none  at  all.  Hermaphrodite 
flowers  smaller  than  in  the  extra-Australian  species,  always  with  5 stamens  only 
and  few  or  sometimes  none  of  the  neuter  ones  at  the  base  of  the  head.  Gland  of 
the  anthers  small,  sometimes  perhaps  quite  wanting.  Ovules  6 to  8.  Pod  when 
perfect  fin.  long,  about  4 lines  wide,  with  4 to  6 seeds. 

Hab.:  Shoalwater  Bay  and  Broadsound,  It.  Broicn  ; Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart;  near  Warwick, 
Beckler;  in  the  interior,  on  the  Maranoa,  <irc.,  Mitchell , Leichhardt,  and  others. 

Var.  major.  Larger  and  more  erect.  Leaves  with  a depressed  gland  below  the  lowest  pair  of 
pinnae,  but  less  conspicuous  than  in  N.  monosperma.  Flowers  rather  large. — Bay  of  Inlets,  Banks 
and  Solander ; Rockhampton  and  Burdekin  Biver,  Herb.  F.  v.  Mueller. 

Var.  villosula.  More  or  less  pubescent.  Pinnae  3 or  4 pairs,  without  glands.  Flower-heads 
rather  large. — Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Landsborouph. 

2.  N.  monosperma  (one-seeded),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  300. 
Stems  apparently  herbaceous,  but  stouter  and  taller  than  in  N.  gracilis  (except 
perhaps  in  the  var.  major).  Pinnfe  2 or  3 pairs  ; leaflets  20  to  30  pairs,  mostly  3 
to  5 lines  long  ; gland  large,  depressed  below  the  lowest  pair  of  pinnae.  Stipules 
and  bracteoles  very  much  smaller  than  in  N.  gracilis  and  very  deciduous. 
Peduncles  very  short,  rarely  exceeding  ^in.  Flowers  small,  all  with  5 stamens 
only,  with  very  few  or  scarcely  any  of  the  neuter  ones  at  the  base  of  the  head. 
Ovules  always  2 only.  Pod  nearly  orbicular,  9,  4,  or  rarely  5 lines  diameter,  with 
a single  seed. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Henne ; Blackall,  B.  A.  Banking. 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^J. 


47B 


91.  -MIMOSA,  Linn. 

(Seeming  to  mimic,  or  to  possess  animal  sensibility.) 

Flowers  small,  capitate  (or  spicate),  4 or  5-merous.  Calyx  minute,  campanu- 
late,  dentate  or  irregularly  laciniate  with  setaceous  segments.  Petals  connate, 
more  or  less  or  nearly  free,  valvate.  Stamens  as  many  or  twice  as  many  as 
petals,  free,  exserted ; anthers  small,  eglandular  ; pollen  grains  indefinite.  Pod 
oblong  or  linear,  usually  flat,  valves  separating  entire  or  in  transverse  articles 
from  the  persistent  sutural  replum. — Herbs,  shrubs  or  trees,  sometimes  scandent, 
aculeate  or  unarmed.  Leaves  bipinnate,  often  sensitive  ; petiolar  glands  rarely 
present.  Pedunculate  heads  (or  spikes)  axillary  or  racemose  towards  the 
extremities,  solitary  or  fascicled. 

A very  large  chiefly  tropical  American  genus,  with  few  outliers  in  the  Old  World. — Oliver. 

1.  1ME.  pudica  (bashful),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  426.  A prickly  procumbent 
spreading  shrub.  Leaves  digitate.  Pinnae  3 to  4,  nearly  sessile,  2 to  3in.  long; 
leaflets  24  to  40,  glabrous,  subcoriaceous.  Flowers  light  purple  or  lilac,  on 
small  pedunculate  heads,  all  down  the  branches,  1 or  2 from  each  axil.  Pod  Jin. 
long,  3 to  4-seeded,  with  very  abundant  straw-colored  weak  prickles  from  both 
sutures,  as  long  as  the  breadth  of  the  pod. 

Hab.:  Tropical  America,  but  spread  over  most  tropical  countries,  naturalised  and  quite  a pest 
in  some  parts  of  Queensland. 


92.  ACACIA,  Willd. 

(From  akazo,  to  sharpen  ; many  species  spinescent.) 

(Yachellia,  W.  and  Am.;  Tetracheilos,  Lehm.;  Chithonanthus,  Lelim.) 

Sepals  5,  4,  or  3,  free  or  united  (wanting  in  A.  Huegelii  and  A.  squamata, 
W.  Australian  species).  Petals  as  many,  free  or  united  (wanting  in  A.  squamata). 
Stamens  indefinite,  usually  very  numerous,  free  or  slightly  connected  at  the  very 
base.  Pod  linear  or  oblong,  flat  or  nearly  cylindrical,  straight,  falcate  or  variously 
twisted,  opening  in  2 valves  or  indehiscent.  Seeds  more  or  less  flattened, 
usually  marked  in  the  centre  of  each  face  with  an  oval  or  horseshoe-shaped 
depression  or  opaque  spot  or  ring,  sometimes  very  obscure.  Funicle  usually 
thickened  into  a fleshy  aril  under  or  round  the  seed. — Trees,  shrubs,  climbers,  or 
rarely  undershrubs,  with  or  without  prickles  or  stipular  spines.  Leaves  twice 
pinnate  or  reduced  to  a simple  phyllodium  or  dilated  petiole.  Flowers  usually 
yellow  or  white,  in  globular  heads  or  cylindrical  spikes,  often  polygamous. 

A very  large  genus,  dispersed  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  globe,  and  in  Australia  the  most 
numerous  in  species  of  all  Pheenogamous  genera.  Of  the  Australian  species,  one  only,  A. 
Farnesiana,  is  common  to  the  warmer  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World,  the  remainder  are 
all  endemic.  Of  these  by  far  the  greater  number  belong  to  the  phyllodineous  series,  which  is 
entirely  Australian,  with  the  exception  of  a very  few  from  New  Caledonia,  the  Indian  Archipelago, 
and  the  Pacific  Islands,  none  of  which  can  be  specifically  identified  with  any  Australian  ones, 
although  very  near  some  of  the  tropical  species.  Acacias  are  also  very  generally  distributed  over 
every  part  of  Australia,  but  are  entirely  absent  from  New  Zealand. — Benth. 

Taken  as  a whole,  the  genus  is  the  most  marked  of  those  which  have  been  dismembered  from 
the  Linnsen  Mimosa,  being  at  once  distinguished  from  Inga  and  its  allies  by  the  free  stamens, 
and  from  the  true  Mimosece  by  their  indefinite  number  ; but,  for  its  subdivision,  notwithstanding 
considerable  differences  in  the  flowers  and  more  striking  ones  in  the  fruit,  it  has  been  found 
impossible  to  establish  upon  these  differences  any  definite  sections,  even  among  those  species 
where  both  flowers  and  fruit  are  well  known,  and  in  the  majority  of  specimens  gathered  the  pod 
is  neglected  by  collectors.  Species  with  the  most  discrepant  pods  are  sometimes  almost  identical 
in  foliage,  and,  on  the  other  hand,  pods  apparently  identical  sometimes  belong  to  species  widely 
different  in  foliage  and  even  in  flower.  I have  therefore  on  each  of  the  three  occasions  when  I 
have  gone  through  the  genus  in  detail,  with  a large  number  of  specimens  before  me,  in  vain 
sought  for  any  better  mode  of  distributing  the  species  than  in  Series,  founded  chiefly  upon 
foliage  and  inflorescence.  There  are  only  one  or  two  species  in  which  the  cylindrical  spike 
appears  to  pass  into  the  globular  head,  and  the  venation  of  the  phyllodia  is  nearly,  though  not 
quite,  as  constant.  The  glands  on  the  upper  edge  of  the  phyllodia  and  on  the  common  petiole 


474 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSyE. 


| Acacia. 


in  the  compound  leaf  seldom  afford  even  a specific  distinction,  and  the  bracts  in  the  flower- 
head  still  less  so,  and  I have  therefore  in  the  descriptions  seldom  mentioned  them.  The  bracts 
arc  almost  always  narrow,  closely  packed  in  with  the  flowers,  and  more  or  less  dilated  at  the 
end,  sometimes  quite  peltate  ; generally  the  outer  ones  of  each  head  are  flatter,  the  inuer  ones 
more  slender  and  proportionally  more  dilated  at  the  end,  where  they  are  usually  ciliate  and 
sometimes  acuminate.  The  characters  derived  from  the  united  or  free  sepals  must  be  used  with 
caution,  for  the  sepals,  at  first  united,  often  separate  as  the  flowering  advances.  The  forms 
assumed  by  the  pod  are  tolerably  constant  in  species,  although  rarely  available  for  classing  them 
in  groups,  so  it  is  also  with  the  seeds,  transverse  or  longitudinal,  and  with  the  infinite  variety 
of  forms  assumed  by  the  funicle.  This  funicle  on  the  ripe  seed  rarely  remains  short  and 
filiform,  it  almost  always  forms  two  or  three  folds  under  the  seed,  the  end  of  the  last  fold  or  the 
whole  of  the  last  and  more  or  less  of  the  lower  folds  being  thickened  into  a variously-shaped 
small  fleshy  aril,  usually  described  as  a strophiole,  but  always  a part  of  the  funicle  and  con- 
tinuous with  the  lower  filiform  part,  or  forming  the  whole  funicle  ; occasionally  the  thickened 
part  is  much  elongated,  extending  round  one  side  of  the  seed,  returning  on  the  same  side  and 
forming  another  double  fold  on  the  other  side,  or  completely  encircling  the  seed  in  a double  fold 
returning  on  the  same  side,  or  extending  twice  round  without  a return,  or  even  encircling  it  in  a 
triple  fold.  All  these  and  other  modifications  appear  to  be  constant  in  each  species,  but  only 
rarely  available  for  specific  diagnosis,  for  in  many  species  the  funicle  is  as  yet  unknown  ; it  is 
often  unsafe  to  rely  on  it  unless  the  seed  is  quite  ripe,  and  then  the  thin  part  of  the  funicle  is 
so  brittle  that  it  is  often  destroyed  merely  by  the  elastic  opening  of  the  pod. — Bentli. 

Leaves  all  or  mostly  reduced  to  flat  terete  or  subulate  phyllodia  nr  minute  scales  without  leaflets. 


iPhyllodiniEa.) 

Flowers  in  globular  heads. 

Phyllodia  none  or  reduced  to  minute  scales.  Branches  rush-like,  not 

spineseent III.  Calamiforafes. 

Phyllodia  (either  small  and  tooth-like  or  vertically  flattened  or 
elongated)  decurrent  on  or  continuous  with  the  branches.  Branches 
3 winged  or  the  phyllodia  (usually  pungent)  very  shortly  or  scarcely 

decurrent,  but  not  articulate I.  Continue. 

Phyllodia  articulate  on  the  stems,  at  least  when  old. 

Phyllodia  rigid,  tapering  into  pungent  straight  points,  usually 

narrow  or  short,  not  whorled  II.  Pungentes. 

Phyllodia  linear-subulate,  terete  or  tetragonous,  rarely  slightly 
flattened,  obtuse  or  with  incurved  or  innocuous  points,  not 

whorled III.  Calamiformes. 

Phyllodia  terete  or  slightly  flattened,  usually  short,  all  whorled  or 

crowded  and  irregularly  whorled  or  clustered IV.  Brunioidf;k. 

Phyllodia  vertically  flattened,  broader  than  thick,  obtuse  acute  or 
with  incurved  or  innocuous  points. 

Phyllodia  1-nerved,  the  veins  pinnate,  reticulate  or  rarely  1 or  2 

secondary  small  nerves  from  the  base  on  one  side  of  the  midrib  V.  Uninerves. 

Phyllodia  with  2,  3,  or  more  parallel  nerves VI.  Plurinerves. 

Flowers  in  cylindrical  or  oblong  spikes. 

Phyllodia  rigid,  tapering  into  pungent  points. 

Phyllodia  several-nerved,  decurrent  on  the  stem 2 .A.  triptera. 

Phyllodia  1 or  3-nerved,  articulate  on  the  stem II.  Pungentes. 

Phyllodia  obtuse,  or  with  a callous,  innocuous  or  hooked  point  . . . . VII.  Jcliflor/e. 


Leaves  all  bipinnate.  Flowers  in  g lobular  heads  or  rarely  in  spikes.  (BipinnatSB.) 
Stipules  none  or  brown  and  scarious.  Spines  none  or  axillary. 


Flower-heads  several,  in  axillary  or  paniculate  racemes  VIII.  Botryocephal.e. 

Stipules  all  or  some  of  them  spineseent.  Flower-heads  single  on  axil- 
lary peduncles  IX.  Gummifer®. 


Div.  I.  PHYLLODINE.E. — Leaves  mostly  phyllodineous  without  leaflets. 

Series  I.  Continual. — Phijllodia  narrow,  rigid,  tapering  into  a pungent  point,  continuous 
with  the  stem  and  shortly  and  trifariously  or  irregularly  decurrent.  Flowers  in  heads  or  spikes 


on  axillary  simple  peduncles. 

Flowers  in  globular  heads.  Phyllodia  crowded  on  the  branchlets, 

slender  and  rigid,  2 to  4in.  long.  Pod  nearly  1 Jin.  broad  1 . A.  Pence. 

Flowers  in  cylindrical  spikes.  Phyllodia  lanceolate,  thick,  several- 

nerved 2.  A.  triptera 


Series  II.  Pungentes. — Rigid  shrubs,  branches  in  some  species  spineseent.  Phyllodia 
articulate  on  the  stem,  rigid,  tapering  into  pungent  points,  subulate,  linear  or  lanceolate,  or  rarely 
none.  Flowers  in  heads  or  spikes,  on  axillary  simple  peduncles. 

(Besides  the  following  species  a few  of  the  short-leaved  Calamiformes  and  of  the  small  rigid- 
leaved  Plurinerves  might  almost  be  classed  among  tbe  Pungentes.)' 


Acacia,  j 


XLIII.  LEGUMIN0SJ1. 


475 


A.  Flurinerves. — Phyllodia  2 or  more  nerved,  or  terete  and  nervele ss.  Heads  globular. 
Sepals  united. 

Seeds  longitudinal  (extratropical  species). 

Peduncles  short.  Pod  4 to  5 lines  broad.  Branches  usually  woolly  3.  A.  lanigera. 
Seeds  obliquely  transverse.  Branches  glabrous,  somewhat  viscid 


(tropical  species)  4.  A.  phlebocarpa. 

B.  Uninerves. — Phyllodia  1 -nerved.  Heads  globular. 

Petals  prominently  striate.  Pod  thick,  with  broad  smooth  margins. 

Flowers  5-merous. 

Phyllodia  straight,  clustered  at  the  old  nodes.  Peduncles  slender. 

Funicle  encircling  the  seed 5.  A.  tetragonophylla. 

Phyllodia  scattered,  divaricate,  rather  broader  or  with  a small 
glandular  angle  at  the  base.  Petals  with  a prominent  midrib. 

Peduncles  slender.  Funicle  filiform (i.  A.  juniperina. 


Series  III.  Calamiformes.—  Phyllodia  rarely  none,  more  frequently  narrow-linear  or 
subulate,  terete  tetragonous  or  very  slightly  flattened,  articulate  on  the  stem,  obtuse  or  with  short 
innocuous  or  recurved  points,  1 or  several-nerved.  Flowers  in  globular  heads  on  simple  axillary 
peduncles,  or  rarely  several  heads  in  a short  raceme,  or  irregularly  racemose  by  the  abortion  of  the 
floral  phyllodia. 

(Some  of  Ser.  VII.,  Julijlorce,  have  similar  phyllodia,  but  cylindrical  or  ovoid  fiower-spikes.) 

A.  Flurinerves.  —Phyllodia  striate,  with  2,  8,  or  more  nerves  on  each  side. 

Phyllodia  mostly  nearly  lin.  long,  with  a hooked  or  recurved  point. 

Peduncles  3 to  4 lines  long.  Petals  narrow,  membranous  (tropical 

species)  7.  A.  Bynoeana. 

B.  Uninerves. — Phyllodia  1 -nerved  or  nerveless. 

Phyllodia  mostly  elongated,  above  ljin  long. 

Peduncles  1-headed.  Sepals  spathulate. 

Phyllodia  1J  to  2 or  rarely  3in.  long  ; nerve  prominent.  Petals 

with  a prominent  midrib  8.  A.  pugioniformis. 

Phyllodia  3 to  6in.  long,  obscurely  nerved.  Petals  without  any 
prominent  nerve 9.  A.  juncifolia. 

Peduncles  mostly  bearing  a raceme  of  2 or  3 heads.  Calyx  shortly 

toothed  or  lobed  10.  A.  calamifolia. 

Series  IV.  Brunioideae. — Phyllodia  numerous,  small,  linear-subulate  (except  A.  conferta), 
verticillate,  clustered  or  crowded,  obtuse  or  ivith  innocuous  or  rarely  rigid  points.  Flowers  in 
globular  heads  or  simple  axillary  peduncles,  usually  exceeding  the  phyllodia. 


Phyllodia  8 to  10  or  more  in  the  whorl,  slender,  under  ljin.  long. 

Petals  striate. 

Phyllodia  recurved  at  the  end,  sulcate.  Pod  sessile  11.  A.  lycopodifolia. 

Phyllodia  recurved  at  the  end,  not  sulcate.  Pod  on  a stipes  of  2 to  3 

lines 12.  A.  galioides. 

Phyllodia  5 to  7 in  the  whorl,  recurved  at  the  end,  not  sulcate.  Petals 

not  striate,  with  a prominent  midrib 13.  A.  Baueri. 

Phyllodia  crowded,  but  scattered  or  irregularly  verticillate,  under  Jin. 
long. 

Phyllodia  linear  subulate  14.  A.  bruniades. 

Phyllodia  flattened  15.  A.  conferta. 


Series  V.  Uninerves. — Phyllodia  vertically  fattened,  either  narrow  and  obtuse  or  with  a 
short  oblique  point,  or  broad  and  obtuse,  acute  or  rarely  pungent-pointed,  with  1 central  or  nearly 
marginal  nerve,  or  very  rarely  2 -nerved.  Flowers  in  globular  heads,  either  on  simple  axillary 

peduncles,  solitary,  in  pairs  or  clusters,  or  several  in  axillary  racemes. 

A.  Armatae. — Shrubs  or  umlershrubs,  not  spinescent.  Phyllodia  from  obovate  to  lanceo- 
late, rarely  above  1 Jin.  long,  more  or  less  undulate,  with  a central  nerve  and  usually  nerve-like 
margins ; marginal  glands  none  or  very  small  and  obscure.  Stipules  generally  persistent,  either 
spinescent  or  setaceous  or  acuminate  or  phyllodia  like.  Peduncles  1 headed. 

Hirsute  or  glabrous.  Phyllodia  obliquely  semiovate  or  lanceolate. 

Stipules  spinescent  (wanting  in  some  garden  varieties)  16  A.  urmatu. 

Some  garden  specimens  of  A.  armata  have  some  of  the  phyllodia  2-nerved  ; the  other  2 or 
more  nerved  species,  formerly  included  in  Armatee,  are  now  transferred  to  the  Plurinerves. 

18,  A.  hispidula,  and  19,  A.  undulifolia , among  Breuifolue,  have  the  undulate  phyllodia,  but 
not  the  stipules  of  Armata’,  and  22,  A.  sentis,  among  Angustifoli<e,  has  occasionally  spinescent 

stipules. 


476 


XLII1.  LEGUMlNOSiE. 


[Acacia. 


B.  Brevifolise. — Shrubs,  never  spinescent.  Phyllodia  either  broad  ovate  or  falcate,  or 
narrow,  oblong  or  linear,  short,  obtuse  or  with  a small  recurved  innocuous  point,  occasionally 
undulate  and  more  pointed.  Stipules  minute  or  none.  Peduncles  1-headed. 

Phyllodia  from  obovate-orbicular  to  linear,  obtuse  but  with  the  nerve 


ending  in  a small  recurved  point.  Sepals  free,  linear-spathulate. 

Phyllodia  rarely  exceeding  Jin.,  linear.  Branches  scarcely  angular. 

Flowers  10  to  15  or  rarely  20  in  the  head 17.  A.  lineata. 

Branches  scarcely  angular. 

Phyllodia  oblong-falcate,  often  undulate,  the  nerve-like  margin 

scabrous  denticulate 18.  A.  hispidula. 

Phyllodia  broadly  ovate  or  orbicular,  mucronate,  much  undulate, 

entire.  Peduncles  slender  19.  A.  undulifolia. 

Phyllodia  obliquely  truncate  at  the  base,  1 -nerved,  the  upper  side 

with  a spine  at  the  angle 20.  A.  plagiophylla. 


C.  Ang-ustifoliae. — Shrubs  or  trees,  not  spinescent.  Phyllodia  oblong -lanceolate  or  linear, 
occasionally  falcate,  with  1 central  nerve  or  rarely  2 -nerved,  mostly  above  1 in.  long.  Stipules 
minute  or  none,  or  rarely  spinescent.  Peduncles  1-headed.  Some  of  the  species  very  resinous. 


Peduncles  usually  nearly  or  above  Jin.  long.  Phyllodia  always  1-nerved. 

Very  resinous.  Lateral  veins  few,  rather  prominent,  anastomosing. 

Calyx  toothed  or  lobed.  Phyllodia  narrow-linear,  numerous  ..  ..21.  A.  Gnidium. 

Not  resinous.  Lateral  veins  scarcely  conspicuous.  Phyllodia  with  a 
prominent  midrib. 

Calyx  short,  truncate  28.  ^4.  salicina. 

Sepals  narrow,  free. 

Pedicels  solitary  or  in  pairs,  the  upper  ones  often  racemose  from 
the  abortion  of  the  phyllodia.  Stipules  often  spinescent. 

Phyllodia  rarely  above  2in.  long 22.  A.  sentis. 

Pedicels  slender,  clustered  in  the  axils.  Stipules  not  spinescent. 

Phyllodia  lanceolate-falcate,  4 to  6in.  long 23.  A.  fasciculifera. 


D.  Racemosae. — Not  spinescent.  Phyllodia  not  pungent  (except  in  a few  broad-leaved 
species),  with  one  central  nerve  or  very  rarely  a second  shorter  or  fainter  one,  the  veinlets  when 
visible  diverging  from  the  midrib  or  reticulate.  Flower-heads  globular,  few  or  all  or  nearly  all  in 
axillary  racemes,  very  rarely  a few  solitary  in  the  lower  axils  of  a young  branch.  Flowers  usually 
small  and  5-merous  in  all  except  A.  myrtifolia.  Petals  not  striate. 

Phyllodia  mostly  long,  falcate-lanceolate  or  almost  linear,  narrowed  at 
the  ends,  more  or  less  distinctly  penniveined.  Calyx  about  half  as 
long  as  the  corolla. 

Eastern  species.  Flower-heads  small. 

Phyllodia  mostly  long  lanceolate-falcate. 

Sepals  free,  narrow.  Gland  of  the  phyllodia  at  the  base  or  none. 


Funicle  surrounding  the  seed  24.  A.  falcata. 

Sepals  united.  Gland  of  the  phyllodia  at  the  base  or  none. 

Veinlets  transverse  ; funicle  short  25.  A.  macradenia. 

Sepals  united.  Gland  of  the  phyllodia  distant  from  the  base,  a 
secondary  nerve  often  leading  to  it.  Veinlets  obtuse.  Funicle 
surrounding  the  seed  26.  A.  penninervis. 

Phyllodia  mostly  long  linear-falcate. 

Sepals  free  or  nearly  so.  Gland  at  the  base  of  the  phyllodia 

minute  or  none.  Funicle  short,  the  last  fold  clavate  . . . . 27.  A.  neriifolia. 

Phyllodia  (on  flowering  branches)  14  to  2Jin.  long,  usually  with  2 or  3 
distant  glands.  Racemes  many-headed.  Sepals  at  first  cohering. 

Three  folds  of  the  funicle  encircling  the  seed 29.  A.  amoena. 

Phyllodia  2 to  5in.  long,  scarcely  falcate,  thick,  obscurely  reticulate. 

Racemes  few-headed.  Sepals  at  first  cohering.  Funicle  clavate, 

scarcely  folded  at  the  base 30.  A.  hakeoides. 

(See  also  the  longest-leaved  forms  of  A.  crassiuscula  and  A.  decora.) 

Phyllodia  linear,  thick,  rarely  falcate-lanceolate,  usually  without  glands, 
the  lateral  veins  reticulate  and  obscure,  mostly  oblong-linear,  obtuse. 

Pod  thick.  Calyx  short,  thin,  truncate.  Seeds  longitudinal  ..  ..28.  A.  salicina. 

Phyllodia  linear  or  lanceolate,  usually  thick.  Sepals  very  thin  or 


narrow,  distinct.  Pod  very  flat,  obtuse.  Seeds  transverse.  Young 
racemes  often  enclosed  in  imbricate  scales. 

Young  branches  acutely  triquetrous.  Pod  broad,  coriaceous  and 
glaucous.  Sepals  very  thin.  Phyllodia  mostly  above  3in.  long  . . 31.  A.  suaveolens. 

Branchlets  dark,  viscid.  Phyllodia  linear,  gland  at  base  32.  A.  Dietrichiana. 

Young  branches  scarcely  angular.  Pod  membranous.  Sepals  very 

narrow.  Phyllodia  several  inches  long,  narrow  linear  33.  A.  Murrayana. 


Acacia.  J 


XLIIL  LEGUMIN0SJ3. 


477 


Phyllodia  rarely  exceeding  l|in.,  linear-lanceolate  or  obliquely  oblong, 
not  very  thick,  without  thick  margins. 

Pod  flat,  4 to  6 lines  broad,  not  contracted  between  the  seeds.  Seeds 
along  the  centre. 

Glabrous  or  pubescent.  Flowers  under  15  in  the  head. 

Phyllodia  linear,  straight 34.  A.  linifolia. 

Hispid  with  long  hairs.  Flowers  above  20  in  the  head 35.  A.  Leichhardtii. 

Pod  rather  thick,  coriaceous,  2 to  2£  lines  broad,  contracted  between 

the  seeds.  Flowers  about  20  in  the  head  36.  A.  crxssiuscula. 

Pod  flat,  about  3 lines  broad,  often  contracted  between  the  seeds. 

Seeds  close  to  the  edge. 

Phyllodia  linear  or  lanceolate,  1 to  l£in.  Flowers  15  to  20  in  the  head  37.  A.  decora. 
Phyllodia  obliquely  oblong  or  broadly  lanceolate,  rarely  above  lin. 

long.  Flowers  8 to  15  in  the  head 38.  A.  buxifolia. 

Phyllodia  falcate  oblong  or  obliquely  ovate,  rarely  above  lin.  long. 

Flowers  4 to  10  in  the  head  39.  A.  liuiata. 

Phyllodia  ovate  obovate  or  broadly  oblong,  usually  under  lin.,  or  in 
Nos.  40  and  41  often  ljin.  long. 

Racemes  much  longer  than  the  phyllodia. 

Glaucous  and  scarcely  pubescent.  Phyllodia  ovate  obovate  or 


broadly  oblong,  1 to  ljin.  long.  Flowers  numerous  40.  A.  podalyriafolia. 

Softly  pubescent.  Phyllodia  elliptical  falcate  or  broadly  and 

obliquely  oblong,  ljin.  or  rather  longer.  Flowers  numerous  ..  41.  A.  uncifera. 
Glaucous  and  glabrous.  Phyllodia  falcate-ovate  or  curved-oblong, 

under  lin.  long.  Flowers  10  to  20  42.  A.  cultriformis. 

Phyllodia  incurved-falcate,  ovate  lanceolate  or  linear,  coriaceous  with 
thick  margins.  Flowers  4-merous,  2 to  4 or  rarely  6 in  the  head. 

Racemes  rarely  exceeding  the  leaves 43.  A.  myrtifolia. 


Series  VI.  Plurinerves. — Phyllodia  vertically  flattened,  obtuse  or  with  an  innocuous  or 
recurved  point  (rarely  pungent  when  the  phyllodium  is  broad),  with  2 or  more  longitudinal  nerves. 
Flowers  in  globular  heads  on  axillary  peduncles,  either  solitary  or  clustered  err  shortly  racemose. 

A.  Triangulares. — Stipules  setaceous  or  minute,  not  spinescent.  Phyllodia  small  (under 
fin.  long),  broadly  falcate-ovate  or  triangular  with  small  points  often  pungent. 

Phyllodia  triangular.  Pod  narrow,  curved  or  twisted,  glabrous. 

Branches  usually  spinescent.  Phyllodia  rather  distant.  Flowers 

20  to  30  in  the  head 44.  A.  sublanata. 

Branches  elongated,  rather  rigid.  Phyllodia  numerous.  Flowers  10 
to  15  in  the  head  45.  A.  amblygona. 

B.  Brevifolise. — Phyllodia  tinder  1 in.  long,  obovate  ovate  or  broadly  oblong,  very  obtuse, 


often  undulate.  Stipules  inconspicuous. 

Phyllodia  f to  lin.  long.  Petals  strongly  striate. 

Phyllodia  faintly  nerved.  Calyx  shortly  toothed.  Pod  thick  and 

hard,  hooked  at  the  end,  tapering  into  a long  stipes 46.  A.  translucens. 

Phyllodia  several-nerved.  Sepals  spathulate,  free  or  separating.  Pod 
thinly  coriaceous,  flat  with  thickened  parallel  margins,  glutinous 
and  villous 47.  A.  impressa. 


C.  Oligoneurae. — Phyllodia  above  fin.  and  mostly  above  1 in.  long,  oblong  lanceolate  or 
linear,  straight  or  scarcely  falcate,  with  2 or  3 nerves,  faintly  or  not  at  all  veined  between  them 
(except  A.  Simsiij,  and  not  glutinous. 

Peduncles  solitary  or  clustered. 

Phyllodia  rigid,  prominently  3-nerved,  rarely  2-nerved,  long,  linear. 

Calyx  turbinate,  lobed  48.  A.  elongata. 

Phyllodia  less  rigid,  nerves  3 rarely  2,  less  prominent,  and  often  veins 
between  them,  not  glutinous  nor  dotted  49.  A.  Simsii. 

D.  IVXicroneura. — Glabrous  or  glaucous  and  not  glutinous.  Phyllodia  thick,  veinless  or 
with  very  fine  scarcely  prominent  parallel  veins,  narrow  or  rarely  short  and  obovate. 

Phyllodia  linear-lanceolate,  1 to  3in.  long. 

Flower-heads  on  short  peduncles. 

Pod  2 to  3 lines  broad,  coriaceous,  longitudinally  striate 50.  A.  homalophylla. 

Pod  curved  sometimes  into  a complete  circle,  veined,  2 to  3in.  long, 

fin.  broad  51.  A.  Georgiiue. 

Pod  5 lines  broad,  thin,  flat,  transversely  reticulate 52.  A.  pendula. 

Flower-heads  sessile  53.  A.  Oswaldi. 

Phyllodia  linear,  fit.  long  or  more. 

Veins  only  visible  under  a lens 54.  A.  coriacea . 

Veins  very  fine  but  prominent 55.  A.  stenophylla. 

Phyllodia  linear-lanceolate,  falcate,  £ft.  long  or  more  62.  A.  harpophyllu. 


478 


XL11I.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Acacia. 


E.  Nervosa;. — Often  viscid,  occasionally  glaucous,  rarely  Iwary  or  pubescent.  Phyllodia 
straight  or  sometimes  falcate,  coriaceous  or  thin,  with  several  prominent  nerves  and,  when  broad, 
reticulate  between  them,  the  nerves  rarely  reduced  to  3 when  the  phyllodium  is  narrow. 

Very  viscid.  Nerves  or  veins  numerous. 

Nerves  parallel  scarcely  anastomosing. 

Phyllodia  narrow-linear 56.  A.  viscidula. 

Phyllodia  linear-lanceolate  or  oblong 57.  A.  ixiopliylla. 

Reticulate  veins  very  prominent,- anastomosing  with  the  nerves 58.  A.  dictyophleba. 

Not  viscid.  Nerves  or  veins  usually  numerous. 

Phyllodia  nearly  straight,  coriaceous,  many-nerved,  strongly 
reticulate. 

Phyllodia  oblong-lanceolate.  Funicle  folded  and  thickened  under 

the  seed 59.  A.  venulosa. 

Phyllodia  falcate-oblong  or  lanceolate,  obtuse.  Veins  numerous. 

Funicle  encircling  the  seed 60.  ^L.  melanoxylon. 

Phyllodia  long  and  falcate,  coriaceous. 

Reticulate  veins  numerous. 

Pod  broad.  Funicle  encircling  the  seed  in  a double  fold  ..  ..  60.  A.  melanoxylon. 

Pod  narrow,  twisted.  Funicle  folded  under  the  seed 61.  A.  implexa. 

Reticulate  veins  few,  scarcely  conspicuous,  nerves  several,  fine  ..  62.  A.  harpophylla. 

Phyllodia  rather  thin,  straight,  with  several  nerves  and  few  fine  inter- 
mediate veins. 

Branches  terete 63.  A.  excelsa. 

Branches  flattened,  2-edged  or  2-winged  64.  A.  complanata. 

Branches  flattened,  drooping,  about  2 lines  broad,  smooth.  Phyllodia 

falcate-lanceolate 65.  A.  homaloclada. 

F.  Dimidiate. — Phyllodia  usually  broad  and  often  long,  falcate  or  very  oblique,  with  2,  3 
or  4 prominent  distant  nerves,  and  reticulately  penniveined  between  them. 

Glabrous.  Phyllodia  rather  thin  (3  to  4in.)  Flower-heads  in  axillary 

racemes  growing  out  into  leafy  branches.  Pod  6 to  8 lines  broad  ...  66.  A.  binervata. 
Branchlets  flattened. 

Phyllodia  broad-lanceolate.  Petals  and  sepals  villous.  Funicle 

filiform,  not  folded 67.  A.  Bakeri. 

Phyllodia  linear-lanceolate  (6  to  7in.).  Pod  broad  (ljin.)  in  the  upper 

half,  sharply  cuneate  towards  the  base 68.  A.  Rothii. 

Hoary  or  glaucous.  Phyllodia  large,  broad  (3  to  4in.)  Pod  above  lin. 

broad  69.  A.  sericata. 

Young  shoots  hoary  or  yellowish-tomentose.  Phyllodia  large,  broad  (4 

to  8in.)  Flower-heads  small,  in  a terminal  panicle.  Pod  fin.  broad  70.  A.  flavescens. 
Angular  towards  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Phyllodia  scaly-hoary, 

falcate-oblong 71.  A.  oraria. 

Series  VII.  JTulifloree. — Phyllodia  vertically  flattened  or  in  a fete  species  terete,  several- 
nerved  or  rarely  \-nerved,  obtuse  acute  or  pointed,  rarely  slightly  pungent.  Flowers  in  cylindrical 
dense  or  interrupted  spikes,  rarely,  when  sessile,  shortly  oblong. 

A.  Rigridulse. — Phyllodia  flat,  often  short,  straight  oblique  or  shortly  falcate.  Spikes  dense. 
Flowers  5-merous. 

Phyllodia  broad,  about  Jin.  long.  Spikes  pedunculate.  Calyx  sinuate- 
toothed. Seeds  oblique  72.  A.  Wickhami. 

Phyllodia  narrow,  obtuse  with  a short  point,  J to  ljin.  long. 

Phyllodia  obscurely  3 to  5-nerved.  Pod  3 to  6 lines  broad.  Seeds 

oblique  73.  A.  lysiphlaa. 

Phyllodia  obscurely  1-nerved.  Pod  1J  line  broad.  Seeds  longitudinal  74.  A.  linarioides. 

Seeds  transverse 75.  A.  Chisholmi. 

Phyllodia  rather  broad,  coriaceous,  mostly  1 to  3in.  rarely  4in.  long, 
obtuse  or  with  a glandular  callous  point,  straight  oblique  or  shortly 
falcate. 

Tomentose  or  pubescent.  Stipules  conspicuous.  Phyllodia  1 to  2in. 

long,  2 to  4-nerved,  with  anastomosing  veins.  Pod  narrow  . . . . 76.  A.  stipuligera. 

Glabrous,  except  the  young  shoots.  Phyllodia  obliquely  narrowed  at 
both  ends,  somewhat  undulate,  with  a terminal  gland  often  large, 
very  coriaceous,  5 to  9-nerved.  Spikes  sessile.  Pod  terete,  turgid. 

Seeds  oblique  77.  A.  umbellata. 

Phyllodia  broadly  oblong-falcate,  obtuse  or  with  a hooked  callous  point, 
very  coriaceous.  Spikes  dense.  Flowers  not  1 line  long.  Pod  flat, 

stipitate.  Seeds  oblique  78.  A.  brevifolia. 

Phyllodia  nearly  straight,  coriaceous,  obtuse,  3 to  4in.  long.  Pod  narrow. 

Seeds  longitudinal.  Branches  very  angular.  Spikes  pedunculate.  ..  79.  A.  yonoclada. 


Acacia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS2E. 


479 


B.  Tetrameras. — Phyllodia  flat , coriaceous  or  thin,  straight  or  falcate,  several-nerved  or 
1 -nerved  when  very  narrow.  Spikes  often  loose.  Flowers  4-merous.  Seeds  longitudinal. 

Spikes  usually  slender  or  interrupted. 

Phyllodia  rarely  falcate,  2 to  Gin.  long  or  more,  3 to  5-nerved,  broadly 

oblong  and  much  reticulate  or  narrow  and  scarcely  veined  . . . . 80.  A.  longifolia. 

Phyllodia  long,  narrow-linear,  mostly  1 -nerved  81.  A.  linearis. 

(A  few  species  of  the  following  Stenophyllce  have  4-merous  flowers,  but  with  linear-terete 
finely  striate  phyllodia.) 

C.  StenophylltE. — Phyllodia  linear-subulate  or  narrow-linear,  straight  or  slightly  curved, 
terete  or  flat  but  thick,  rarely  under  2in.  long  or  above  1J  line  broad.  Spikes  dense,  short  or 
slender,  with  small  5-merous,  or  in  terete-leaved  species  often  4-merous  flowers. 

Spikes  sessile.  Flowers  5-merous  or  4-merous.  Pod  narrow.  Phyllodia 
very  long,  minutely  striate  under  a lens.  Spikes  Jin.  long.  Flowers 

5-merous 82.  A.  cyperophylla. 

Spikes  pedunculate.  Flowers  usually  5-merous  Pod  narrow,  with 
longitudinal  seeds  in  A.  pityoides ; hard,  with  valves  rolling  back 
elastically  and  oblique  seeds,  in  A.  xylocarpa,  A.  gonocarpa,  and  A. 
drepanocarpa ; flat,  broad,  thin,  with  oblique  or  transverse  seeds  in 
A.  aneura. 

Phyllodia  terete  or  scarcely  flattened,  very  finely  striate  under  a lens. 

Calyx  thin  and  deeply  divided,  the  lobes  not  spathulate 83.  A.  pityoides. 

Sepals  free,  narrow-spathulate  84.  A.  aneura. 

Phyllodia  broad-linear,  curved  at  the  point,  with  many  fine  nerves. 

Seeds  longitudinal,  oblong  85.  A.  cibaria. 

Phyllodia  oblong,  tapering  at  the  base,  2in.  long,  closely  striate.  Pod 

not  2in.  long,  Jin.  broad.  Seeds  transverse  88.  A.  Kempeana. 

Phyllodia  terete,  nerveless  or  obscurely  1-nerved.  Calyx  lobed  . . ..  87.  A.  xylocarpa. 

Pyllodia  very  narrow  but  flat,  1-nerved.  Sepals  free  88.  A.  gonocarpa. 

Phyllodia  flat  but  thick,  prominently  3 or  5-nerved,  obtuse  (tropical 

species  89.  A . drepanocarpa. 

Phyllodia  flat,  minutely  striate  under  a lens.  Sepals  free,  linear- 
spathulate.  Spikes  cylindrical  84.  A.  aneura. 

D.  Falcatae. — Phyllodia  usually  long  or  large,  more  or  less  falcate,  narrowed  at  each  end, 
with  numerous  parallel  nerves  or  veins  either  all  equal  or  the  central  one  or  several  more  prominent 
than  the  others,  the  smaller  ones  occasionally  anastomosing.  Spikes  slender,  dense  or  rarely 
interrupted.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous. 

(Several  species  of  this  group  cannot  be  distinguished  without  the  fruit.) 

Pod  (where  known  and  probably  in  all  the  species)  narrow,  with  longi- 
tudinal seeds,  or  rarely  broader  with  the  longitudinal  seeds  along 
the  centre. 

Phyllodia  narrow-lanceolate  or  linear-lanceolate,  rather  thick,  slightly 
falcate,  with  very  fine  parallel  nerves,  the  midrib  usually  more 
prominent. 

Loosely  pubescent.  Stipules  conspicuous.  Phyllodia  not  above  3in. 

long 90.  A.  conspersa. 

Glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  silky-pubescent.  Stipules  incon- 
spicuous. Phyllodia  mostly  above  3in.  long.  Pod  unknown  . . 91.  A.  doratoxylon. 

Phyllodia  narrow-lanceolate,  not  so  thick  and  rather  more  falcate  than 
in  the  preceding  species,  usually  with  about  3 nerves  more 
prominent  than  the  rest. 

Phyllodia  sprinkled  with  a few  hairs.  Pod  flat,  slightly  convex  over 


the  seeds 92.  A.  delibrata. 

Phyllodia  glabrous.  Nerves  numerous.  Pod  very  convex  over  the 
seeds  and  moniliform 93.  A.  torulosa. 

Phyllodia  glabrous.  Pod  spirally  twisted  into  numerous  coils  ..  94.  A.  julifera. 

Phyllodia  glabrous.  Spikes  interrupted,  2 to  3in.  long  (slender  but 
dense  in  the  preceding  species) 95.  A . Solandri. 

Phyllodia  more  falcate  than  in  the  preceding  species,  often  broader  or 
longer,  with  more  nerves.  Pod  narrow  or  flat,  straight  or  twisted. 

Branches  scarcely  angular.  Phyllodia  coriaceous,  often  hoary  with 


numerous  very  fine  nerves,  all  free  from  the  base.  Calyx 

pubescent  97.  A . glaucescens. 

Phyllodia  almost  glabrous,  longitudinally  striate.  Pod  narrow- 

compressed  and  twisted  98.  A.  Maideni. 

Branches  very  angular.  Phyllodia  with  1 or  2 of  the  principal 

nerves  confluent  with  the  lower  margin  of  the  base.  Pod  twisted  99.  A.  Cunning hamii. 


480 


XL11I.  LEGUM1NOS/E. 


[ Acacia . 


Branches  terete  or  nearly  so.  Flowers  glabrous. 

Pod  very  narrow  and  straight 100.  A.  leptocarpa. 

Pod  broad,  very  flexuose  or  twisted,  not  spiral.  Seeds  along  the 

centre 101.  A.  polystachya. 

Branches  terete  or  nearly  so.  Flowers  pubescent.  Pod  long  and 

slender,  longitudinally  striate  and  furrowed 102.  A.  holcocarpa. 


Pod  (where  known  and  probably  in  all  the  species)  rather  broad, 
coriaceous,  woody  or  rarely  rather  thin.  Seeds  very  oblique  or 
transverse.  Parallel  veins  of  the  phyllodia  usually  numerous  and 
closely  packed. 

Phyllodia  long,  narrow,  and  slightly  falcate  (as  in  A.  julifera).  Pod 
flat,  with  straight  margins  and  undulate  valves.  Seeds  orbicular. 

Branches  acutely  angular  103.  A.  plcctocarpa. 

Phyllodia  broad,  falcate  or  very  oblique.  Pod  broad,  hard,  and  woody, 
obliquely  veined. 

Branchlets  3-angled.  Pod  obtusely  recurved  or  hooked  at  the  end, 

much  narrowed  at  the  base 104.  A.  aulacocarpa. 

Branchlets  very  flat.  Pod  not  hooked,  narrowed  at  the  base  ..  ..  105.  A.  calyculata. 

Branchlets  nearly  terete  or  slightly  angular.  Pod  broad,  very  hard, 
obliquely  truncate  at  the  base. 

Pod  flat  or  scarcely  twisted,  the  outer  margins  entire 106.  A.  crassicarpa. 

Pod  much  twisted,  the  outer  margin  deeply  sinuate  107.  A.  auriculiformis. 

Pod  quite  uncertain.  Phyllodia  narrowed  at  both  ends,  with  numerous 
parallel  veins  or  nerves,  and  usually  falcate  (as  in  the  Falcatce),  but 

under  3in.  long  96.  A.  leptostachyu. 

E.  Dimidiatte. — Phyllodia  large,  broad,  very  oblique  or  falcate,  with  3 or  more  distant 
prominent  nerves,  more  or  less  confluent  at  or  near  the  lower  margin  at  the  base,  pinnately  net- 


veined  beticeen  them. 

Branchlets  very  acutely  angular  or  almost  winged. 

Glabrous  and  glaucous.  Spikes  pedunculate.  Flowers  mostly  4- 

merous 108.  A.  latifolia. 

Hoary  or  silky-pubescent.  Spikes  sessile.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous  109.  A.  holosericea. 

Branchlets  subtriangular.  Pod  falcate 110 . A.  Mangium. 

Branchlets  soon  nearly  terete.  Pod  spirally  curled,  forming  a close  curl 

about  lin.  long  111.  A.  cincinnata. 

Branchlets  terete  or  scarcely  angular. 

Spikes  1 to  2in.  long.  Flowers  glabrous.  (Erect  shrub)  112.  A.  dimidiata. 

Spikes  scarcely  Jin.  long,  dense.  Flowers  densely  pubescent.  Stem 

prostrate  or  diffuse 113.  A.  humifusa. 

Div.  II.  BIPINNA  TM. — Leaves  all  bipinnate. 


Series  VIII.  Botryocephalae. — Leaves  bipinnate.  Stipules  small  or  none.  Flower-heads 
globular,  in  axillary  racemes  or  terminal  clusters. 

Glabrous  and  glaucous.  Leaflets  4 to  8 pairs,  obov ate -oblong,  very 


obtuse,  4 to  6 lines  long.  Gland  close  to  the  lowest  pinnae 114.  A.  spectabilis. 

Foliage  pubescent.  Leaflets  6 to  10  pairs  or  more,  obtuse,  3 to  4 lines 

long.  Gland  at  the  base  of  the  petiole 115.  A.  polybotrya. 

Foliage  glabrous.  Leaflets  10  to  15  pairs,  obtuse  or  acute,  firm,  pale 

underneath,  3 to  4 lines  long  116.  A.  discolor. 


Pinnae  8 to  15  pairs.  Leaflets  very  numerous,  narrow-linear  and  very 
small,  or  3 to  4 lines  long  and  subulate. 


Glabrous  or,  if  tomentose,  pubescent,  the  young  shoots  of  a yellowish 
or  golden  tinge.  Pod  (always  ?)  under  4 lines  broad,  often  con- 
tracted between  the  seeds  117.  A.  decurrens. 

Silvery-tomentose  or  very  glaucous.  Pod  (always?)  above  4 lines 

broad,  not  contracted  between  the  seeds  118.  A.  dealbata. 

Hirsute  with  spreading  hairs  of  a reddish-brown  colour.  Leaflets 

small.  Glands  few 119.  A.  Arundelliana. 

Pinna  3 to  6 pairs.  Leaflets  6 to  10  pairs,  oblong,  under  2 lines  long. 

Branches  glabrous  or  hispid.  Flowers  numerous,  in  dense  heads  ...  120.  A.  leptoclada. 

Series  IX.  Gummiferse. — Leaves  bipinnate.  Stipules  of  some  or  all  the  leaves  persistent 


and  spinescent.  Flower-heads  globular,  on  solitary  or  clustered  simple  peduncles . 
Bracts  small,  close  under  the  flower-heads.  Pinnae  4 to  6 pairs.  Leaflets 
small,  10  to  20  pairs.  Pod  thick,  cylindrical  or  spindle-shaped,  in- 


dehiscent,  pithy  between  the  seeds 121.  A.  Farnesiana. 

Bracts  forming  a little  4-lobed  ring  round  the  middle  of  the  peduncle. 

Pinnae  15  to  25  pairs.  Leaflets  scarcely  1 line  long.  Flowers  4- 
merous.  Pod  coriaceous ; valves  slightly  convex,  striate  lengthwise  122.  A.  Bidwilli. 
Inflorescence  spicate 123.  A.  Sutherlandi. 


Acacia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^. 


481 


1.  A.  Peuce  (Pine-like),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  151  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  328. 
Ironwood.  A tree  of  15  to  30ft.,  with  the  aspect  of  a pine,  quite  glabrous  and 
somewhat  glaucous.  Phyllodia  rather  crowded,  not  articulate,  but  very  shortly 
decurrent  on  the  stem,  subulate-terete,  rigid,  tapering  into  pungent  points,  mostly 
2 to  3in.  long  or  rather  more,  straight  and  erect,  with  few  slightly  prominent 
nerves.  Stipules  very  minute  and  deciduous.  Flowers  . . . Pod  undulate, 
very  flat,  glaucous,  several  inches  long  and  nearly  l^in.  broad.  Seeds  broadly 
ovate,  flat,  the  funicle  filiform  to  the  end. 

Hab.:  Birdsville,  Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft. 

2.  A.  triptera  (three- winged),  Benth.  in  Hook.  LoncL.  Journ.  i.  325,  and  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  323  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  ix.  A dense  rigid  shrub  of  3 or  4ft.,  quite  glabrous. 
Phyllodia  numerous,  lanceolate,  recurved-falcate,  decurrent  on  the  stem,  rigid 
and  tapering  into  a pungent  point,  ^ to  lin.  long,  striate  with  several  prominent 
nerves,  without  any  marginal  gland.  Stipules  scarcely  any.  Peduncles  short, 
solitary  or  2 together,  bearing  each  a cylindrical  spike  of  ^ to  fin.  Flowers  not 
crowded,  very  small  and  globular  in  the  bud,  mostly  4-merous.  Calyx  short, 
broad,  lobed.  Petals  membranous  and  smooth.  Pod  curved,  flexuose,  2 to  2^in. 
long,  to  2 lines  broad,  slightly  constricted  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  longi- 
tudinal ; the  funicle  forming  2 or  3 folds  at  the  base  of  the  seeds. 

Hab.:  Sandstone  ridges,  Mantuan  Downs,  Mitchell ; also  in  Leichhardt's  collection. 

3.  A.  lanigera  (woolly),  A.  Cunn.  in  Field,  N.  S.  Wales,  345  ; Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  324.  A rigid  shrub  of  several  feet,  the  young  shoots  usually  woolly- 
pubescent.  Phyllodia  linear  or  lanceolate,  rigid,  tapering  into  a pungent  point, 

1 to  1|  or  rarely  2in.  long,  mostly  2 to  3 lines  broad,  with  several  nerves,  occa- 
sionally anastomosing  or  all  parallel.  Peduncles  exceedingly  short,  solitary, 

2 together  or  almost  clustered,  bearing  a globular  head  of  about  30  flowers, 
mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  campanulate,  with  broad  obtuse  lobes,  not  half  as  long 
as  the  corolla.  Petals  smooth,  united  to  the  middle.  Pod  attaining  6 to  bin.  in 
length,  and  4 or  even  5 lines  in  breadth  at  the  seeds,  much  contracted  between 
them  ; the  valves  slightly  convex.  Seeds  longitudinal,  last  short  fold  of  the 
funicle  and  the  end  of  the  next  much  thickened,  the  remainder  of  the  latter  and 
the  third  fold  filiform  and  extending  some  way  round  the  seed,  but  not  seen 
perfect. — Bot.  Mag.  t.  2922. 

Hab.:  Stanthorpe. 

Var.  gracilipes.  Peduncles  rather  longer,  although  shorter  than  in  A.  trinervata. 

A.  multinervia,  DC.  Mem.  Leg.  445,  Prod.  ii.  450,  answers,  in  the  short  character  given,  to 
A.  lanigera,  with  the  exception  of  the  gland  on  the  upper  edge  of  the  phyllodium,  which  I do  not 
find  in  that  or  any  other  allied  species  known  to  me.— Benth. 

4.  A.  phlebocarpa  (pods  veined),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  ii.  119  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  325  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  vii.  5.  A glabrous,  somewhat  viscid 
shrub  of  2 to  5ft.;  branches  nearly  terete.  Phyllodia  narrow-lanceolate,  rigid, 
tapering  into  a pungent  point,  1 to  l£in.  long,  mostly  2 to  3 lines  broad, 
narrowed  at  the  base,  with  several  parallel  nerves  occasionally  anastomosing,  1 to 

3 more  prominent.  Stipules  small.  Peduncles  solitary,  attaining  £in.  when  in 
fruit.  Flowers  5-merous,  but  only  seen  withered.  Calyx  turbinate,  lobed,  half 
as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  apparently  striate.  Pod  curved,  hard,  rather  flat, 
with  much  thickened  margins  and  obliquely  veined  between  them,  depressed 
between  the  seeds.  Seeds  rounded,  compressed,  oblique  ; funicle  with  the  last  2 
or  3 folds  much  dilated  into  a cup-shaped  apparently  2-lobed  aril,  enclosing  the 
base  of  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria. 

The  species  appears  to  be  closely  allied  to  A.  lanigera. — Bentli. 


482  XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE.  [Acacia. 

5.  A.  tetragonophylla  (four-angled  phyllodia),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  [Ann. 
Sac.  iii.  121  (under  A.  sphacelata),  and  Fragm.  iv.  8 ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  880 ; F. 
v.  M.  lc.  Dec.  i.  7.  A tall  spreading  shrub  or  small  tree,  glabrous  ; branches  terete. 
Phyllodia  usually  clustered  on  the  old  nodes,  linear-subulate,  rigid,  pungent- 
pointed,  | to  lin.  long  or  rarely  more,  with  1 or  2 nerves  on  each  side.  Stipules 
small,  deciduous.  Peduncles  solitary  or  2 together,  nearly  as  long  as  the 
phyllodia,  bearing  a globular  head  of  numerous  (often  above  50)  5-merous 
flowers.  Sepals  linear-spathulate,  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  smooth, 
usually  cohering  to  the  middle.  Pod  much  curved  or  twisted,  flat  with  thickened 
margins,  nearly  8 lines  broad.  Seeds  longitudinal ; funicle  yellow,  shortly 
flexuose  and  much  thickened  at  the  base,  then  completely  encircling  the  seed  in  a 
single  fold  more  or  less  dilated  the  whole  length. 

Hab.:  Bulloo  Biver,  J.  F.  Bailey. 

6.  A.  juniperina  (Juniper-like),  Willi.  Spec.  PI.  iw  1049;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  381.  A rigid  bushy  divaricate  shrub,  attaining  several  feet,  the  branches 
pubescent  or  in  some  varieties  glabrous.  Phyllodia  scattered,  often  numerous, 
divaricate,  linear-subulate,  rigid  and  tapering  into  a pungent  point,  rarely  above 
Jin.  long,  with  a prominent  nerve  on  each  side  and  a rather  broad  base. 
Peduncles  often  exceeding  the  leaves,  bearing  each  a dense  globular  head  of 
numerous  (20  to  50)  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Bracts  more  or  less  acuminate. 
Sepals  narrow-spathulate,  at  first  united  but  readily  separating.  Petals  also 
separating,  smooth  but  with  prominent  midribs.  Pod  more  or  less  falcate,  flat,  1 
to  2in.  long,  about  2 lines  broad,  usually  contracted  between  the  seeds.  Seeds 
longitudinal,  the  funicle  but  little  folded  and  filiform  to  the  end. — Mimosa  juni- 
perina, Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  64;  M.  vlicina,  Wendl.  Coll.  ii.  25,  t.  6;  M. 
ulicifolia,  Salisb.  Prod.  324?;  A.  juniperina,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  398;  DC.  Prod. 

ii.  449  ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  105  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  7 ; A.  verticillata,  Sieb. 
PI.  Exs.  not  of  Willd.;  A.  eeliinula,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  449  ; A.  punqens,  Spreng.  Syst. 

iii.  134. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Island  and  Brisbane  Biver,  F.  v.  Mueller.  Flowering  in  October. 

Var.  Brownei.  Branches  glabrous  ; peduncles  slender. — A.  acicularis,  B.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew 
ed.  3,  v.  460,  not  of  Willd.;  altered  to  A.  pugioniformis,  by  Wendl.  in  Flora,  1819,  139,  but  not 
A.  pugioniformis,  Wendl.  Comm.;  A.  Brownii,  Steud.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  449  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t. 
1333;  A.  arceutlios,  Spreng.  Syst.  iii.  134. 

A.  genistifolia,  Link,  Enum.  Hort.  Berol.  ii.  442  ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  449,  above  referred  with  doubt 
to  A.  trinervata,  may,  from  the  very  incomplete  description  given,  be  almost  equally  referable  to 
some  forms  of  A.  juniperina. — Bentli. 

7.  A.  Bynoeana  (after  Dr.  Bynoe),  Bentli.  inLinnaa , xxvi.  614,  and  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  337  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  iii.  11.  Shrubby,  with  numerous  branches,  loosely 
pubescent  and  sometimes  glutinous.  Phyllodia  numerous,  linear-terete,  striate 
with  several  nerves,  usually  recurved  at  the  point,  rarely  above  lin.  long 
Stipules  small,  deciduous.  Peduncles  3 to  4 lines  long,  bearing  each  a small 
globular  head  of  about  20  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  with  narrow  ciliate 
lobes.  Petals  narrow,  smooth,  not  much  longer  than  the  calyx  and  quite  distinct. 
Pod  much  curved,  flat,  with  thickened  margins,  scarcely  above  1 line  broad. 
Seeds  oblong,  longitudinal,  the  last  fold  of  the  funicle,  and  sometimes  part  of  the 
next  also,  thickened  into  a fleshy  aril. — A.  leptophylla , F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  9. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

These  specimens  are  alluded  to  by  F.  v.  Mueller,  PI.  Viet.  ii.  12,  as  nearly  resembling  A.  Wil- 
helmsiana.  The  corresponding  ones,  both  in  Herb.  Hooker  and  in  Herb.  Sonder,  were,  by  some 
mistake,  labelled  as  A.  Wilhelmsiana  from  the  Murray  scrub,  and  were  mentioned  by  me  in 
Linnsea,  xxvi.  613,  as  a var.  of  A.  nematophylla , F.  v.  M.  The  latter  is,  however,  a short-leaved 
form  of  A.  calamifolia,  which  has  never  more  than  1 nerve  on  each  side  of  the  phyllodium. — 
Benth. 


Acacia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


483 


8.  A.  pugioniformis  (dagger  form),  Wencll.  Comm.  Arar.  38,  t.  9,  hut  not  the 
syn.  given  in  Flora,  1819,  139 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  338.  A tall  glabrous  shrub, 
with  slender  slightly  angular  branches.  Phyllodia  rather  numerous,  straight  or 
slightly  curved,  mostly  erect,  linear-subulate,  1J  to  2 or  rarely  3in.  long, 
abruptly  terminating  in  a short  straight  point,  nearly  tetragonous  by  a prominent 
nerve  on  each  side.  Stipules  minute.  Peduncles  solitary  or  2 together,  2 to  3 
lines  or  rarely  Jin.  long,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of  numerous  flowers, 
mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  linear-spathulate,  ciliate,  at  length  free,  about  half  as 
long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  smooth,  with  a prominent  midrib.  Pod  unknown  — 
DC.  Prod.  ii.  450  ; A.  quaclrilateralis,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  451. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  and  Logan  Rivers,  A.  Cunningham ; also  in  Leichhardt's  collection. 

The  A.  quadrilateralis  inserted  by  Decaisne  in  the  Herb.  Tim.  Deser.  132  as  a Timor  plant, 
which  I have  not  seen,  is  more  likely  to  be  the  following  species. — Benth.  . 

9.  A.  juncifolia  (Rush-leaved),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond.  Journ.  i.  341,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  839  ; F.  r.  M.  lc.  Dec.  ii.  A tall  glabrous  shrub,  with  slender 
branches,  quite  terete.  Phyllodia  linear-subulate,  erect  or  spreading,  slightly 
flattened  with  a scarcely  prominent  nerve  on  each  side,  3 to  Bin.  long  or  even 
more,  with  a very  short  erect  or  curved  point  or  obtuse.  Stipules  minute. 
Peduncles  solitary  or  2 together,  rarely  Jin.  long,  bearing  each  a small  globular 
head  of  numerous  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  spathulate,  at  length  free, 
half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  smooth,  without  the  prominent  midrib  of  A. 
pugioniformis.  Pod  straight,  flat  or  flexuous,  often  3 or  4in.  long,  1J  to  2 lines 
wide.  Seeds  obovate-oblong,  longitudinal ; funicle  not  folded,  slightly  thickened 
towards  the  end. — A.  pinifolia,  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  342. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  E.  coast,  R.  Brown ; Port  Bowen,  A.  Cunningham ; 
near  Mount  Pluto,  Mitchell ; also  in  Leichhardt’s  collection. 

Var.  planifolia.  Phyllodia  flatter,  nearly  a line  broad,  with  a more  prominent  midrib,  almost 
like  those  of  A.  subulata,  but  the  peduncles  all  simple. — In  Mitchell’s  collection  (Benth.) 

10.  A.  calamifolia  (cane-like),  Sweet,  in  Hindi.  Bot.  Beg.  t.  839  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  339.  A tall  shrub,  glabrous  and  often  glaucous  or  slightly  mealy, 
the  branches  rather  slender  and  terete.  Phyllodia  linear-subulate,  in  the 
northern  specimens  very  slender  and  mostly  3 to  4in.  long,  in  the  more  southern 
ones  usually  about  2in.,  and  from  that  to  3in.  rarely  shorter,  and  then  often 
slightly  flattened  and  nearly  1 line  broad  but  thick,  sometimes  slender  as  in  the 
long  ones,  always  tapering  into  a fine  recurved  point  which  only  wears  away  with 
age,  nerveless  or  with  one  fine  nerve  on  each  side.  Flower-heads  globular, 
smaller  than  in  A.  pugioniformis,  and  usually  3 or  4 in  a short  raceme,  more 
rarely  solitary.  Flowers  numerous,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  thin  and  trans- 
parent, with  short,  broad,  ciliate  lobes,  often  splitting  into  spathulate  sepals. 
Petals  smooth,  distinct.  Pod  often  5 or  6in.  long,  usually  curved,  2 to  2J  lines 
broad,  but  much  contracted  between  the  distant  seeds,  the  valves  hard  and  convex 
over  the  seeds.  Seeds  oblong,  longitudinal ; funicle  long,  often  almost  encircling 
the  seed,  then  bent  back  and  returning  within  the  previous  fold,  thickened  at  the 
end  into  a long  clavate  or  shortly  turbinate  fleshy  aril. — Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  909  ; 
F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  12  ; A.  pulverul'enta,  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond. 
Journ.  i.  312  (the  shorter-leaved  southern  specimens). 

Hab.:  Stanthorpe. 

11.  A.  lycopodifolia  (Club  Moss-leaved),  A.  Cunn.  in  Ilook.  Jr.  PI.  t.  172; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  343.  A much-branched  diffuse  or  divaricate  shrub,  clothed 
with  very  short  spreading  hairs  and  more  or  less  viscid.  Phyllodia  verticillate, 
about  8 to  10  in  the  whorl,  subulate,  rarely  above  3 lines  long  and  often  only  1 to 
2 lines,  sulcate  with  a prominent  vein  on  each  side,  erect  at  the  base,  recurved  at 
the  end  with  a fine  glabrous  viscid  point,  sometimes  very  short,  sometimes  nearly 


484 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


f Acacia. 


as  long  as  the  phyllodium.  Stipules  setaceous.  Peduncles  longer  than  the 
phyllodia,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of  numerous  dowers,  mostly  5-merous, 
the  bracts  protruding  when  young.  Calyx  very  short,  with  small  acute  teeth. 
Petals  several  times  as  long,  striate,  pubescent,  united  above  the  middle.  Pod 
sessile  or  very  shortly  contracted  at  the  base,  quite  flat,  straight  or  slightly 
curved,  1 to  l'iin.  long,  2^  to  8 lines  broad.  Seeds  nearly  orbicular,  oblique,  the 
last  fold  of  the  funicle  thickened  into  a fleshy  aril. 

Hab.:  Hammersley  Range. 

Yar.  glabrescens.  Pubescence  much  shorter  or  disappearing.  Phyllodia  rather  longer,  but 
silicate,  with  recurved  points,  as  in  the  ordinary  form.  Calyx  rather  more  prominent.  Pod 
sessile. — A.  asperulacea,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  123. 

12.  A.  galioides  (Galium-like),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  i.  844,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  342  ; F.  r.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  iii.  7.  Pubescent  or  tomentose,  with  verticil- 
late  finely  subulate  phyllodia,  as  in  A.  lycopodifolia , but  the  phyllodia  are  more 
slender,  slightly  striate  only,  not  sulcate  with  prominent  nerves,  2 to  5 lines  long, 
recurved  at  the  end  but  apparently  without  viscid  points.  Flowers  mostly  5- 
merous,  in  globular  heads  on  peduncles  exceeding  the  leaves,  as  in  that  species, 
but  the  calyx  is  at  least  one-third  as  long  as  the  corolla,  and  the  pod  is  always 
borne  on  a stipes  of  2 to  3 lines.  Seeds  in  centre. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  and  a variety  with  rather  stouter 
phyllodia,  Sweers  Island,  Henne  (Benth.) 

13.  A.  Baueri  (after  the  brothers  Bauer),  Bentli.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  i. 
344,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  342  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  iii.  4.  Apparently  an  undershrub, 
with  erect  or  ascending  stems,  under  1ft.  high,  the  terete  branchlets  minutely 
pubescent,  otherwise  glabrous.  Phyllodia  in  whorls  of  5 to  7,  linear-subulate, 
terete,  without  prominent  nerves,  but  often  a slight  furrow  underneath,  recurved 
at  the  end  and  obtuse  or  with  a minute  point,  about  4 to  6 lines  long.  Stipules 
minute  or  none.  Peduncles  rather  longer  than  the  phyllodia,  bearing  a very 
small  head  of  10  to  20  flowers,  mostly  5-merous  and  scarcely  f line  long.  Calyx 
fully  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  with  acuminate  teeth.  Petals  with  a prominent 
midrib,  but  not  striate.  Pod  falcate,  narrowed  at  each  end,  If  to  2 lines  broad, 
hard,  longitudinally  striate.  Seeds  longitudinal,  2 to  3 lines  long,  $ line  broad. 

Hab.:  Fraser  Island,  Miss  Lovell. 

The  aspect  of  the  plant  is  that  of  A.  subternata,  but  the  phyllodia  are  vertieillate  as  in  the 
preceding  species,  although  fewer  in  the  whorl. — Benth. 

14.  A.  bruniades  (like  a Brunia),  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  404  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  343.  A heath-like  shrub,  glabrous  or  the  terete  branches 
minutely  pubescent.  Phyllodia  crowded,  but  scattered  or  irregularly  vertieillate, 
linear-terete,  2 to  4 lines  long,  with  short  straight  points,  without  prominent 
nerves  or  furrows.  Stipules  minute  or  none.  Peduncles  longer  than  the 
phyllodia,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of  rather  small  flowers,  mostly  5-merous. 
Calyx  turbinate,  angular,  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  with  short  obtuse  minutely 
ciliate  lobes.  Petals  free,  smooth  with  rather  prominent  midribs.  Pod  not  seen. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  .4.  Cunningham  ; Mounts  Hooker  and  Lindsay,  Fraser. 

15.  A.  conferta  (leaves  crowded),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ. 
i.  345,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  343  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  iii.  8.  A tall  heath-like  shrub, 
with  terete  slightly  pubescent  branches.  Phyllodia  crowded,  scattered  or  irregu- 
larly vertieillate,  linear,  compressed,  3 to  4 or  rarely  5 lines  long,  rigid,  mostly 
obtuse,  without  nerves  or  with  slightly  thickened  nerve-like  margins,  f to  1 line 
broad.  Stipules  minute  or  none.  Peduncles  longer  than  the  phyllodia,  bearing 
each  a globular  head  of  numerous  small  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  linear- 
spathulate,  distinct  or  slightly  united  at  the  base.  Petals  distinct,  smooth,  but 


Acacia.  ] 


XLTTI.  LEGUMINOS^L 


485 


with  slightly  prominent  midribs.  Pod  very  flat,  stipitate,  obtuse,  1 to  l^in.  long, 
about  5 lines  broad,  glaucous.  Seeds  nearly  transverse,  ovate,  the  last  fold  of  the 
funicle  dilated  into  a cup-shaped  aril. 

Hab.:  Shoalwater  Bay,  Ft.  Brown  ; Dawson  River.  F.  r.  Mueller : Maranoa,  Mitchell. 

16.  A,,  armata  (armed),  R.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Keiv  ed.  3,  v.  463  ; Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  347.  A tall  bushy  shrub,  attaining  sometimes  10ft.  or  more  ; branches 
angular-striate,  hirsute-pubescent  or  rarely  glabrous.  Phyllodia  semiovate, 
obliquely  oblong  or  incurved-lanceolate,  undulate,  obtuse  or  with  a very  short 
oblique  point,  with  a nearly  central  midrib  and  pinnate  veins,  varying  from 
4 lines  to  above  lin.  in  length,  and  in  breadth  from  one-fifth  to  nearly  half  their 
length.  Stipules  straight,  divaricate  and  spinescent,  often  4 to  5 lines  long. 
Peduncles  usually  about  as  long  as  the  phyllodia,  bearing  a globular  head  of 
rather  numerous  5-merous  flowers.  Calyx  thin,  lobed,  but  not  usually  separating 
into  sepals,  about  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  narrow,  glabrous,  smooth. 
Pod  straight  or  curved,  li  to  2in.  long,  2 to  3 lines  broad,  not  contracted  between 
the  seeds,  softly  villous  or  rarely  glabrous  or  hispid.  Seeds  oblong,  longitudinal, 
the  funicle  slightly  dilated  nearly  from  the  base,  forming  3 or  4 folds,  scarcely 
more  thickened  under  the  seed. — Bonpl.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  55  ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  449  ; 
Bot.  Mag.  t.  1653  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  49  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  3 ; A.  furcifera, 
Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Three  Exped.  ii.  267, 

Hab.:  Gladfield,  C.  J.  Gwyther. 

Var.  angustifolia.  Phyllodia  narrower. — A.  paradoxa,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  449  ; A.  undulata,  Wild. 
Enum.  Hort.  Berol.  Suppl.  68 ; Wendl.  Comm.  Acac.  t.  3 ; Bot.  Reg.  t.  843  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t. 
753  ; Reichb.  Ie.  et  Descr.  PL  t.  89. 

This  species  is  now  an  old  inmate  of  our  gardens,  where  it  varies  much,  and  is  said  to  have 
been  frequently  hybridized.  Some  of  these  forms  have  a second  nerve  to  some  or  all  the 
phyllodia,  or  have  the  stipules  very  small  or  none.  These  garden  forms  include  A.  ornithophora , 
Sweet,  FI.  Austral,  t.  24;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1469;  A.  hybrida,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1342;  A. 
micracantha,  Dietr.  in  Allgem.  Gart.  Zeit.  i.  83  : A.  tristis,  Grah.  in  Bot.  Mag.  t.  3420.  It  is 
possible  that  a few  of  the  Western  or  out-of-the-way  stations  given  for  the  species  may  have 
been  erroneously  founded  on  cultivated  specimens  sent  as  wild. — Bentli. 

17.  A.  lineata  (linear  leaves),  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Bon,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  403  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  353.  A bushy  shrub  of  several  feet ; branches  nearly 
terete,  usually  pubescent  or  villous  and  sometimes  slightly  resinous.  Phyllodia 
linear,  with  a small  hooked  point,  about  ^-in.  long  or  rarely  fin.  or  rather  more, 
the  nerve  very  near  the  lower  margin  and  usually  without  any  gland.  Stipules 
minute.  Peduncles  slender,  rarely  exceeding  the  phyllodia,  bearing  each  a small 
globular  head  of  10  to  15  or  rarely  more  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals 
distinct,  linear-spathulate  Petals  smooth.  Pod  linear,  curved  or  twisted, 
coriaceous,  1£  to  2 lines  broad.  Seeds  longitudinal,  the  funicle  thickened  into  a 
clavate  fleshy  aril  scarcely  so  long  as  the  seed. — Bot.  Mag.  t.  3346 ; A . runci- 
formis,  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  404 ; F.  v.  M.  PL  Viet.  ii.  21 ; 
A.  dasyphylla,  A.  Cunn.;  Benth  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  i.  359  (a  more  pubescent 
form) ; A.  imbricata,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  5,  ii.  177. 

Hab.:  Eumundi. 

I have  not  followed  F.  v.  Mueller  in  taking  up  the  name  of  mneiformis,  because  that  of 
lineata,  of  the  same  date,  is  universally  adopted  by  gardeners  as  well  as  botanists,  and  does 
not  appear  to  me  to  be  in  itself  objectionable. — Benth. 

18.  A.  hispidula  (hairy),  Willd.  Spec.  PI.  iv.  1054  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
355.  A rigid  spreading  shrub,  scabrous  all  over  with  very  short  stiff  hairs  or 
tubercles.  Phyllodia  numerous,  broadly  falcate,  with  a minute  point,  cuneate  at 
the  base,  mostly  £ to  fin.  long,  2 to  3 lines  broad,  with  a central  nerve  and 
thickened  nerve-like  margins  more  or  less  tuberculate  or  almost  denticulate. 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Acacia. 


486 

Peduncles  short,  bearing  each  a small  globular  head  of  12  to  20  flowers,  mostly 
5-merous.  Calyx  lobed,  about  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  smooth, 
connate  to  the  middle.  Pod  ovate  and  1 -seeded  or  oblong  and  2-seeded,  very 
obtuse,  about  4 lines  broad,  flat  but  thickly  coriaceous,  without  prominent 
margins.  Seeds  oval-oblong,  longitudinal ; funicle  with  the  last  fold  much 
thickened  and  nearly  as  long  as  the  seed,  and  shortly  folded  below  it. — Mimosa 
hispidula,  Sm.  Bot.  Nov.  Holl.  59,  t.  16;  A.  hispidula,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  450;  Lodd. 
Bot.  Cab.  t.  823;  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  161. 

Hab.:  Cooper’s  Plains,  near  Brisbane. 

19.  A.  undulifolia  (wavy-leaved),  A.  Cnnn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  404  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  355.  A shrub,  sometimes  low  and  bushy  but  often  attaining 
a great  size,  and  very  handsome  from  its  long  pendulous  garland-like  flowering 
branches ; branchlets  slightly  angular  but  soon  terete,  pubescent,  hirsute,  or 
rarely  glabrous.  Phyllodia  numerous,  ovate  or  almost  orbicular,  very  obliquely 
truncate  or  narrowed  at  the  base  and  often  petiolate,  usually  about  ^in.  but 
varying  from  \ to  nearly  lin.  long,  coriaceous,  undulate,  1-nerved  and  penni- 
veined,  the  margins  thickened,  terminating  in  a short  or  fine  point.  Peduncles 
slender,  often  exceeding  the  phyllodia,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of  20  to  30 
or  more  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  very  short,  toothed.  Petals  smooth, 
united  above  the  middle.  Pod  shortly  stipitate,  7 to  9 lines  broad,  very  flat, 
with  nerve-like  margins.  Seeds  flat,  ovate,  oblique  ; funicle  with  the  last  fold 
thickened  and  not  half  so  long  as  the  seed,  and  short  folds  below  it. — Bot.  Mag. 
t.  3394;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1544;  Lemaire,  -Tard.  Fleur,  t.  282;  A.  uncinata, 
Lodd.;  Lindl.  Bot.  Reg.  t.  1332;  A.  piligera,  A.  Cunn.  in  Bot.  Mag.  under  n. 
3394;  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  166  (A.  setigera,  A.  Cunn.) 

Hab.:  Southern  Queensland. 

20.  A.  plagiophylla  (transverse-leaved),  F.  v.  M.  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii. 
131  ; Ic.  Dec.  iv.  5.  A compact  small  shrub,  the  branchlets  more  or  less  angular 
and  pubescent.  Phyllodia  numerous,  glabrous,  seldom  attaining  ^in.  in  length, 
obliquely  truncate  at  the  base,  1-nerved,  margins  thickened,  terminating  in  a 
sharp  point,  the  upper  margin  curved  with  a sharp  point  near  the  base,  the  lower 
margin  nearly  straight.  Peduncles  solitary,  slender,  usually  twice  as  long  as  the 
phyllodia,  bearing  a globular  head  of  about  20  5-merous  flowers.  Calyx  broadly- 
toothed.  Petals  lanceolate,  much  longer  than  the  calyx.  Pod  stipitate,  oblong, 
flat,  from  1A  to  2in.  long,  Ain.  broad,  with  nerve-like  margins.  Seeds  3 to  4 in  a 
pod,  oval,  transverse  in  the  pod  ; funicle  straight,  sharply  bent  and  thickened 
close  under  the  seed. — A.  undulifolia,  var.  humilis,  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  356. 

Hab.  Along  the  North  Coast  Railway  line. 

Scarcely  more  than  a form  of  A.  undulifolia , A.  Cunn.,  as  stated  by  Mr.  Bentham  in  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  357,  but  figured  as  a distinct  species  by  Baron  Mueller,  l.c. 

21.  A.  Grnidium  (Gnidia-like),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  359.  A small  tree, 
glabrous  with  the  young  shoots  glutinous  ; branches  erect,  virgate,  soon 
becoming  terete.  Phyllodia  numerous,  erect,  narrow-linear,  obtuse  with  a small 
callous  hooked  point.  1 to  2in.  long  and  not  above  1 line  broad,  rigid  with  a 
scarcely  prominent  midrib,  the  lateral  veins  obscure,  anastomosing,  and  some- 
times almost  parallel.  Peduncles  slender,  nearly  Ain  long,  bearing  each  a 
globular  head  of  15  to  20  flowers,  mostly  5-merous,  but  often  also  4-merous. 
Calyx  shortly  and  broadly  lobed,  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  smooth. 
Pod  unknown. 

Hab.:  Under  sandstone  hills  near  Mount  Pluto,  Mitchell. 

On  a hasty  survey,  I had  formerly  put  this  aside  as  a variety  of  A.  viscidula,  from  which,  how- 
ever, on  examination  I find  it  to  differ  essentially  in  the  venation  of  the  phyllodia  as  well  as  in 
the  flowers. — Benth. 


Acacia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


487 


22.  A.  sentis  (prickly),  F.  r.  21.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  128,  and  PI.  Viet. 

ii.  18  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  3G0  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  iv.  9.  “ Gundey  bluey,”  St. 

George,  “ Narran,”  St.  George,  Wedd.  A divaricately-branched  rigid  shrub  or 
small  tree,  branchlets  nearly  terete,  glabrous  or  pubescent  when  young. 
Phyllodia  lanceolate-oblong  or  linear,  mostly  oblique  falcate  or  curved,  1 -nerved 
and  more  or  less  penniveined,  in  some  specimens  fin.  long  and  2 or  3 lines  broad, 
in  others  more  than  2in.  long  and  about  1 line  broad,  usually  glabrous,  the 
marginal  gland  near  the  base  or  none.  Stipules  either  subulate-spinescent  or 
very  small  or  none.  Peduncles  rather  slender,  solitary  or  in  pairs,  axillary  or  by 
the  abortion  of  the  phyllodia  in  terminal  racemes,  bearing  each  a small  globular 
head  of  20  to  30  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  linear-spathulate,  free. 
Petals  smooth.  Pod  thin,  flat,  h to  fin.  broad.  Seeds  broadly  ovate,  longi- 
tudinal, along  the  centre  of  the  pod  ; funiele  transverse,  gradually  thickened  from 
the  base  upwards,  straight  or  shortly  folded  under  the  seed.— A.  Victoria , Benth. 
in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  333. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Barcoo  River,  Mitchell. 

Wood  close-grained,  hard,  and  nicely  marked. — Bailey’s  Cat  Ql.  Woods  No.  128b. 

23.  A.  fasciculifera  (fascicle-bearing),  F.  v.  21.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  361 ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  iv.  10.  A tree,  glabrous  in  all  its  parts ; branchlets 
slightly  angular.  Phyllodia  lanceolate-falcate,  acuminate,  with  a callous  point, 
narrowed  at  the  base,  mostly  4 to  6in.  long,  coriaceous,  with  a prominent  midrib 
and  nerve-like  margins,  the  pinnate  veins  scarcely  prominent.  Peduncles  fili- 
form, ^ to  lin.  long  or  even  more,  clustered  in  the  axils,  bearing  each  a globular 
head  of  20  to  30  or  more  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  narrow,  linear- 
spathulate,  free.  Petals  smooth,  soon  separating.  Pod  6in.  long  and  nearly 
fin.  broad.  Seeds  longitudinal,  nearly  orbicular. 

Hab.:  Rockhampton  and  More  ton  Bay,  Dallacliy. 

The  phyllodia  are  nearly  those  of  A.falcata,  but  rather  more  coriaceous,  the  inflorescence  is 
very  different,  showing  an  affinity  to  A.  harpophylla  and  A.  complanata. — Benth. 

Wood  of  a red  colour,  very  hard,  close  in  grain ; a useful  building  wood. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql. 
Woods  No.  128a. 


24.  A.  falcata  (boomerang-formed),  Willd.  Spec.  Pl.  iv.  1053;  Benth.  FI. 

Austr.  ii.  361.  “ Burra,”  Nanango,  Shirley.  A tall  shrub  or  tree,  glabrous,  with 

angular  branchlets.  Phyllodia  lanceolate-falcate,  acuminate,  much  narrowed 
towards  the  base,  3 to  6in.  long  or  even  more,  1-nerved,  obliquely  penniveined, 
the  margins  slightly  thickened  without  any  gland  or  with  an  obscure  one  at  the 
base.  Racemes  much  shorter  than  the  phyllodia,  usually  with  10  to  20  small 
globular  heads  of  about  20  small  flowers,  mostly  5-merous  ; peduncles  short  and 
slender.  Sepals  free,  narrow-spathulate,  ciliate.  Petals  smooth,  soon  separating. 
Pod  flat,  with  slightly  thickened  margins,  2 to  3in.  long,  about  3 lines  broad. 
Seeds  ovate,  longitudinal,  close  to  the  margin  ; funiele  slightly  dilated  and 
coloured  from  the  base,  very  long,  extending  round  the  seed  and  bent  back  on  the 
same  side,  encircling  it  in  a double  fold  and  thickened  at  the  end  into  a short  fleshy 
aril. — 21imosa  obliqua,  Wendl.  Bot.  Beob.  57;  A.  falcata , DC.  Prod.  ii.  451; 
Wendl.  Comm.  Acac.  20,  t.  14;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1115;  A.  playiophylla, 
Spreng.  Syst.  iii.  135. 

Hab  : Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  Leichhardt,  anti  others. 

Wood  yellow  near  the  outside,  the  rest  light-brown;  heavy  and  tough.  Might  prove  a useful 
cabinet  wood. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  128c. 

25.  A.  macradenia  (large-glanded),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  360,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  362  ; F.  v.  21.  Ic.  Dec.  v.  7.  A sbrub  of  10  to  12ft.,  glabrous, 
with  angular  branchlets.  Phyllodia  lanceolate-falcate,  rather  acute,  much 
narrowed  towards  the  base,  coriaceous,  1-nerved,  with  thickened  margins  and 
often  a gland  at  the  base,  like  those  of  A.  falcata,  but  usually  longer,  attaining 


Part  II.  m 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Acacia. 


4B8 

from  Gin.  to  1ft.,  and  the  fine  veins  more  numerous,  prominent,  and  transverse. 
Racemes  short  with  several  small  globular  heads  of  flowers  mostly  5-merous. 
Calyx  turbinate,  more  than  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  shortly  and  broadly 
toothed,  ciliate.  Petals  smooth,  pubescent.  Pod  3 to  4in.  long,  fiat,  2 to  3 lines 
broad.  Seeds  oblong  ; funicle  not  enlarged  under  the  seed,  not  folded. 

Hab.:  Beds  of  rivers  near  Mount  Pluto,  Mitchell  (in  flower) ; Rockhampton,  Thozet  (in  fruit). 

Wood  close-grained  and  tough. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  129. 

2G.  A.  penninervis  (feather-nerved),  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  452;  Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  362.  A tree  attaining  sometimes  40ft.  but  usually  smaller,  glabrous 
in  all  its  parts  in  the  common  variety,  with  angular  branchlets.  Phyllodia  from 
oblong  to  lanceolate-falcate,  more  or  less  acuminate,  usually  3 to  4in.  long,  but 
sometimes  twice  that  length,  much  narrowed  towards  the  base,  1 -nerved  and 
more  or  less  prominently  and  finely  penniveined,  the  margins  usually  nerve-like, 
and  often  but  not  always  a short  secondary  nerve  terminating  in  a marginal  gland 
much  below  the  middle.  Racemes  rather  short  but  loose,  with  several  small 
globular  heads  of  about  20  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  truncate  or  shortly 
toothed,  not  half  so  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  smooth.  Pod  flat,  straight  or 
curved,  with  slightly  thickened  margins,  often  4 or  5in.  long,  nearly  iin.  broad. 
Seeds  ovate,  longitudinal  ; funicle  long,  dilated  and  coloured  nearly  from  the  base, 
extending  round  the  seed  and  bent  back  on  the  same  side,  so  as  to  encircle  it  in  a 
double  fold. — Bot.  Mag.  t.  2754  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  14  ; A.  impressa,  Lindl. 
Bot.  Reg.  t.  1115  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1319. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River.  Moreton  Bay,  Fraser,  F.  r.  Mueller  ; sandstone  ridges  near  Mount 
Pluto,  Mitchell. 

Gum  contains  24-5%  of  arabin,  and  55-3%  of  metarabin. — Lauterer. 

Wood  dark-brown,  with  a small  quantity  of  yellow  sapwood,  tough ; useful  for  cabinet-work. — 
Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  T Voods  No.  130. 

Var.  falciformis.  Phyllodia  usually  longer  and  more  falcate,  young  shoots  and  inflorescence 
minutely  hoary  or  golden-pubescent.  Pod  nearly  fin.  broad. — A.  falciformis,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  452  ; 
A.  astringens,  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  405. — Moreton  Bay,  Leichhardt. 

27.  A.  neriifolia  (Oleander-leaved),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond.  Journ. 
i.  357,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  363.  A tall  and  handsome  shrub  or  small  tree ; 
branchlets  slender,  slightly  angular,  glaucous  or  mealy-tomentose  when  young, 
but  soon  glabrous.  Phyllodia  linear-lanceolate,  more  or  less  falcate,  with  a small 
callous  point  often  recurved,  much  narrowed  towards  the  base,  mostly  3 to  5in. 
long  and  2 to  4 lines  broad,  1-nerved,  obscurely  penniveined,  with  1 or  sometimes 
2 or  3 distant  marginal  glands  rarely  all  wanting.  Racemes  always  simple, 
rather  slender,  much  shorter  than  the  phyllodia,  the  rhachis  and  peduncles 
usually  tomentose.  Flower-heads  globular,  small,  with  30  to  40  flowers,  mostly 
5-merous.  Sepals  spathulate,  more  than  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  ciliate,  free 
or  slightly  adnate  below  the  middle.  Petals  smooth,  usually  free.  Pod  flat, 
straight  or  nearly  so,  several  inches  long,  about  4 lines  broad,  often  slightly  con- 
tracted between  the  seeds.  Seeds  oval-oblong,  longitudinal ; funicle  with  the  last 
fold  appressed  and  thickened  from  the  middle  upwards  into  a club-shaped  aril, 
the  lower  folds  short  and  filiform. 

Hab.:  Open  forests  on  the  Balonne  River,  Mitchell ; Stanthorpe. 

Wood  dark-coloured  and  prettily  marked,  tough,  and  close  in  grain. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql. 
Woods  No.  130b. 

28.  A.  salicina  (Willow-like),  Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Three  E.vped.  ii.  20;  Benth. 

FI.  Austr.  ii.  367.  “ Baka,”  Rockhampton,  Thozet,  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree, 

with  branches  often  pendulous,  the  foliage  of  a pale  or  glaucous  hue  and  quite 
glabrous  ; branchlets  scarcely  angular.  Phyllodia  mostly  straight  or  nearly  so, 
oblong-linear  or  lanceolate,  obtuse  or  slightly  acuminate,  much  narrowed  at  the 
base,  2 to  5in.  long  and  not  above  -^in.  broad,  but  in  some  varieties  occasionally 
broader  or  falcate,  always  rather  thick,  the  midrib  scarcely  prominent,  the  lateral 


Acacia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


489 


veins  obscurely  reticulate,  the  margins  scarcely  thickened,  the  gland  very  rare. 
Racemes  short,  irregularly  bearing  2 or  3 dense  globular  heads  or  reduced  to  a 
single  head.  Flowers  20  or  more,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  short,  truncate, 
entire  or  minutely  toothed.  Petals  quite  smooth.  Pod  straight,  1 to  Bin.  long, 
in  the  ordinary  form  not  above  3 lines  broad  ; valves  somewhat  convex,  hard  and 
thick.  Seeds  orbicular,  longitudinal ; funicle  thickened  and  usually  scarlet 
almost  from  the  base,  forming  several  folds  under  the  seed.— F.  v.  M.  PI.  Yict. 
ii.  12  ; Dietr.  FI.  Univers.  N.  Ser.  t.  83  ; A.  lir/ulata,  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook. 
Lond.  Journ.  i.  362. 

Hab.:  Open  forest  lands  on  the  Balonne,  Mitchell ; Suttor  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

Wood  dark-coloured,  tough,  easily  worked ; would  be  useful  for  cabinet-work. — Bailey's  Cat. 
Ql.  Woods  No.  131. 

Var . variants.  “Dulan,”  “Boolbah,”  St.  George,  Wedd.  Branches  more  spreading.  Phyllodia 
more  veined,  the  lower  ones  often  much  broader  and  almost  penniveined,  as  in  A.  penninervis, 
but  without  the  thickened  margin  or  gland.  Pod  about  4 lines  broad,  the  seeds  often  oblique  and 
the  folds  of  the  funicle  extending  up  one  side. — A.  varians,  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  132. 
To  this  belong  all  the  tropical  and  subtropical  specimens.  It  is  generally  a very  distinct  form, 
and  it  is  with  some  hesitation  that  I have  followed  F.  v.  Mueller  in  considering'it  a variety  only 
of  A saliciiia. — Benth. 

29.  A.  amcena  (pleasant),  Wendl.  Comm.  Acac.  10,  t.  4 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  366.  A tall  shrub,  quite  glabrous,  young  branches  pubescent.  Phyllodia 
obliquely  lanceolate  or  oblanceolate,  straight  or  falcate,  obtuse  or  with  a small 
recurved  point,  much  narrowed  towards  the  base,  not  very  thick,  1-nerved  with 
nerve-like  margins  and  more  or  less  distinctly  veined,  with  1,  2,  or  3 often 
prominent  distant  marginal  glands,  li  to  2Jin.  long  on  the  flowering  shoots, 
longer  on  the  barren  branches.  Racemes  usually  shorter  than  the  phyllodia, 
with  several  small  globular  heads  of  about  8 to  12  flowers,  mostly  5-merous. 
Sepals  short,  broad,  usually  separating  when  the  flower  is  fully  out.  Petals  5, 
distinct,  smooth  with  prominent  midribs.  Pod  flat,  straight  or  curved,  with 
nerve-like  margins,  several  inches  long,  3 to  4 lines  broad,  not  contracted  between 
the  seeds.  Seeds  ovate,  longitudinal ; funicle  dilated  and  reticulate  from  near 
the  base,  very  long,  extending  round  the  seed,  returning  on  the  same  side  and 
bent  back  a third  time,  encircling  the  seed  in  a triple  fold,  and  thickened  at  the 
end  into  a fleshy  aril,  two-thirds  the  length  of  the  seed. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  452  ; F. 
v.  M.  PL  Viet.  ii.  17. 

Hab.:  Glasshouse  Mountains. 

30.  A.  hakeoides  (Hakea-like),  A.  Cunn.:  Benth.  in  }Iooh.  Lond.  Journ.  i. 
354,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  367  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  v.  10.  A tall  shrub,  glabrous  or 
nearly  so,  the  branches  scarcely  angular.  Phyllodia  linear-spathulate  or  narrow 
oblong-lanceolate,  obtuse,  much  narrowed  at  the  base,  2 to  5in.  long,  rather  thick, 
1-nerved,  obscurely  marked  with  longitudinal  reticulations,  the  margins  scarcely 
prominent,  usually  with  a gland  towards  the  middle.  Racemes  shorter  than  the 
phyllodia,  with  a few  globular  heads  of  about  20  flowers,  mostly  5-merous. 
Sepals  spathulate,  cohering  at  first  but  readily  separating,  half  as  long  as  the 
corolla.  Petals  smooth,  glabrous  or  minutely  pubescent.  Pod  flat,  usually 
curved,  2 to  3 lines  broad,  much  contracted  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  oblong, 
longitudinal ; funicle  half  as  long  as  the  seed,  the  last  fold  thickened  into  a 
clavate,  keeled,  fleshy  aril  almost  from  the  base,  with  2 or  3 very  minute  folds 
below  it. — F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  16. 

Hab.:  On  Pituri  country,  Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft,  who  states  that  the  natives  use  the  ashes  of  the 
burnt  green  leaves  for  chewing  with  the  Pituri. 

Allied  in  flowers  to  A.  crassiuscula,  and  in  foliage  to  A.  salicina,  but  differing  in  several 
points  from  each  of  these  species. — Benth. 


400 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Acacia. 


81.  A.  suaveolens  (sweet-scented),  Willd.  Spec.  PI.  iv.  1050;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  869.  A shrub,  attaining  about  8 to  6ft.,  quite  glabrous,  often  glaucous, 
with  acutely  angled  branchlets.  Phyllodia  linear  or  almost  lanceolate,  mostly  3 
to  4in.  but  sometimes  Gin.  long,  2 to  4 lines  broad,  obtuse  or  mucronulate, 
narrowed  towards  the  base,  rather  thick,  1 -nerved  with  nerve-like  margins, 
obscurely  veined.  Flower-heads  small,  in  axillary  racemes,  at  first  enclosed  in 
imbricate  scaly  bract’s,  which  fall  off  very  early.  Rhachis  and  peduncles  slender. 
Flowers  6 to  10  in  the  head,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  thin,  narrow  linear- 
spathulate,  quite  distinct.  Petals  thin,  quite  smooth.  Pod  oblong,  flat,  coria- 
ceous, glaucous,  very  obtuse,  1 to  llin.  long,  6 to  8 lines  broad.  Seeds  oblong, 
transverse  ; funicle  filiform  nearly  till  maturity,  when  it  is  contracted  into  short 
folds  more  or  less  thickened  under  the  seed  into  a small  fleshy  aril. — Mimosa 
suaveolens,  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  i.  253  ; Labill.  PI.  Nov.  Holl.  ii.  87,  t.  236  ; 
M.  obliqua , Lam.  in  Journ.  Hist.  Nat.  i.  89,  t.  5,  according  to  Wendl.  Comm. 
Acac.  38,  but  not  of  Pers.;  M.  anyustifolia , -Jacq.  Hort.  Schoenbr.  iii.  74,  t. 
391;  A.  suaveolens,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  453 ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  730;  Reichb.  Ic.  et 
Descr.  PI.  t.  46;  Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  107;  F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  14  ; A.  angusti- 
folia, Wendl.  Comm.  Acac.  34;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  453. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  Fitzalan.  Usually  a coast  species. 

32.  A.  Dietrichiana  (after  Mrs.  Amalia  Dietrich),  F.  v.  M.  Sou.  Sci.  llcc. 
ii.  149,  and  Ic.  Dec.  vi.  8.  Branchlets  viscid,  dark-colored,  slender,  not  angular. 
Phyllodia  much  elongated,  linear,  1 -nerved,  almost  straight,  short-pointed, 
bearing  a gland  close  above  their  base.  Heads  of  flowers  solitary,  small,  globular, 
somewhat  viscid,  on  stalks  of  twice  or  thrice  their  length.  Sepals  5,  spathulate- 
linear,  soon  free,  not  fringed,  above  half  as  long  as  the  nerveless  petals,  not  much 
longer  than  the  rhomboid,  laminated,  but  otherwise  very  thin  bracts.  Ovary 
glabrous,  blunt.  Pod  stipitate,  2Jin.  long,  narrow,  acute  at  the  point,  margins 
nerve-like  and  constricted  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  oval  with  an  oblique  point 
at  the  base  ; funicle  not  thickened  under  the  seed,  straight  with  a slight  bend  at 
the  seed. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  in  Mueller’s  2nd  Syst.  Cens.  Austr.  PI.  77. 

33.  A.  IVturrayana  (after  — Murray),  F.  v.  M.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  370. 
Glabrous,  branchlets  slightly  angular.  Phyllodia  linear,  straight  or  nearly  so, 
obtuse  or  with  a callous  hooked  point,  5 to  Gin.  long,  1 to  1J  line  wide,  thick, 
with  a slightly  prominent  nerve  and  very  obscurely  veined.  Peduncles  about  Jin. 
long,  2 or  3 together  in  a short  raceme,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of  numerous 
(above  50)  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  very  thin,  narrow,  linear-spathulate, 
fully  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  free  or  nearly  so,  narrow,  very  thin. 
Pod  linear,  2 to  3in.  long,  about  4 lines  broad,  flat,  obtuse  ; valves  membranous. 
Seeds  transverse,  ovate  ; funicle  filiform  or  slightly  thickened  from  the  base, 
forming  2 or  3 short  folds  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Found  principally  inland  in  open  forest,  on  the  Balonne,  &c. 

34.  A.  linifolia  (flax-leaved),  Willd.  Sp.  PI.  iv.  1051  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
371.  A tall  shrub,  glabrous  or  minutely  pubescent,  sometimes  glaucous  when 
young ; branchlets  angular.  Phyllodia  linear  or  linear-lanceolate,  narrowed  at 
each  end,  1 to  ljin.  long,  1J  to  2 or  rarely  2J  lines  broad,  rather  thin,  1-nerved, 
slightly  veined,  the  slender  nerve-like  margins  and  midrib  often  minutely  ciliate, 
with  a small  gland  above  the  base.  Racemes  scarcely  exceeding  the  phyllodia  or 
shorter,  comprising  several  small  globular  heads  of  about  8 to  12  flowers,  mostly 
5-merous.  Calyx  short,  broadly  lobed.  Petals  smooth,  separating  nearly  to  the 
base.  Pod  linear,  very  flat,  2 to  4in.  long,  4 to  6 lines  broad  and  not  contracted 
between  the  seeds  ; valves  thinly  coriaceous,  with  nerve-like  margins.  Seeds 
longitudinal,  along  the  centre  of  the  pod,  the  last  fold  of  the  funicle  thickened 


Acacia.  ] 


XL1II.  LEGUMlNOSdS. 


491 


into  a club-shaped  lateral  aril,  the  other  folds  minute. — Mimosa  linifolia,  Vent. 
Jard.  Cels.  t.  2 ; Andr.  Bot.  Hep.  t.  394  ; M.  linearis,  Wendl.  Bot.  Beob.  56,  and 
Hort.  Herrenh.  8,  t.  18,  not  of  Sims;  A.  abietina,  Willd.  Sp.  PI.  iv.  1051  ; DC. 
Prod.  ii.  453;  A.  linifolia,  Bonpl.  .Jard.  Malm.  56,  t.  16;  DC.  Prod.  ii. 
453  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  2168  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  383  ? (this  fig.  looks  more  like 
A.  subulata). 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  Fraser,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others;  Wide 
Bay,  Leichhardt ; Broadsound,  Bowman.  Flowering  in  July. 

Wood  of  a light  colour,  red  in  the  centre,  close-grained  and  tough. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods 
No.  132. 

35.  A.  Leichhardtii  (after  L.  Leichhardt),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  372. 
Branches  slender,  terete,  hispid  with  long  spreading  hairs.  Phyllodia  linear- 
lanceolate,  falcate,  mucronate,  rarely  above  lin.  long,  the  midrib  and  nerve-like 
margins  prominent  and  ciliate,  otherwise  veinless,  the  marginal  gland  about  the 
middle,  often  wanting.  Racemes  much  longer  than  the  phyllodia,  slender,  with 
numerous  small  heads  of  20  or  more  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  turbinate, 
shortly  lobed,  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  smooth.  Pod  very  flat,  2 to 
4in.  long,  about  4 lines  broad,  hispid  with  long  hairs,  but  not  seen  ripe. 

Hab.:  Expedition  range,  Leichhardt. 

36.  A.  crassiuscula  (somewhat  thick),  Wendl.  Comm.  Acac.  31,  t.  8 ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  372.  A shrub  of  several  feet,  glabrous  and  often  rather 
glaucous  when  young ; branches  usually  acutely  angled.  Phyllodia  numerous, 
linear,  often  falcate,  with  a small  oblique  point  or  the  lower  ones  obtuse  and 
almost  lanceolate,  rather  thick,  1 -nerved  and  veinless,  the  nerve-like  margins  often 
but  not  always  ciliate,  1^-  to  2in.  long  in  some  specimens,  above  3in.  in  others, 
1|  to  2 or  in  larger  ones  3 lines  broad,  the  marginal  gland  below  the  middle. 
Racemes  shorter  than  the  phyllodia,  with  several  small  dense  globular  heads  of 
20  or  more  flowers.  Calyx  turbinate,  fully  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  ciliate  and 
readily  separating  into  spathulate  sepals.  Petals  often  separating,  with  prominent 
midribs.  Pod  linear,  rather  thick,  about  2^  lines  broad,  contracted  between  the 
seeds.  Seeds  in  the  centre  of  the  pods,  but  not  seen  perfect. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  453  ; 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  108;  A.  adunca,  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  406; 
A.  Sieberiana,  Tausch.  in  Flora,  1836,  420,  not  of  DC. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  Fitzalan. 

Although  evidently  distinct  from  all  other  species  I have  examined,  it  is  impossible  to  define 
this  one  satisfactorily  until  the  fruit  shall  be  more  certainly  known.  It  is  certainly  very  distinct 
from  the  Western  plant  referred  to  in  “ Plant®  Preissian®.” — Benth. 

37.  A.  decora  (handsome),  Pieichb.  Icon.  E.vot.  t.  199;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
372.  A shrub  of  several  feet,  glabrous  or  slightly  glaucous-tomentose  ; branchlets 
angular.  Phyllodia  lanceolate  or  linear,  narrowed  at  the  base,  straight  or 
slightly  falcate,  1 to  2in.  long,  thicker  than  in  A.  linifolia,  1-nerved,  slightly 
penniveined,  with  nerve-like  margins  and  usually  with  a gland  below  the  middle. 
Racemes  usually  numerous,  longer  than  the  phyllodia,  with  several  globular 
heads  of  about  20  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  shortly  lobed,  not  half  so 
long  as  the  corolla.  Pod  straight  or  curved,  flat,  about  3 lines  broad.  Seeds 
longitudinal,  close  to  the  upper  suture  ; last  fold  of  the  funicle  thickened  into  a 
lateral  club-shaped  aril,  the  lower  folds  very  small. 

Hab.:  Keppel  Bay,  R.  Brown;  Dawson  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; near  Mount  Pluto,  Mitchell. 

Perhaps  a variety  of  A.  buxifolia,  differing  only  in  the  longer  phyllodia  and  more  numerous 
flowers  in  the  heads.  Some  specimens  from  the  Melbourne  Botanic  Garden,  apparently  of  this 
species,  have  the  phyllodia  still  longer  and  narrower. — Benth. 

Gum  eaten,  Cloneurry. — Palmer. 

38.  A.  buxifolia  (box-leaved),  A.  Cunn.  in  Field,  N.  8'.  Wales,  344;  Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  372.  A glabrous  shrub  with  angular  branchlets.  Phyllodia 
obliquely  oblong-lanceolate,  somewhat  falcate,  narrowed  at  each  end,  usually 


492 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Acacia. 


under  lin.,  rarely  l|in.  long,  rather  thick,  with  a scarcely  prominent  nerve  and 
obscure  veins,  the  marginal  gland  small  or  none.  Racemes  scarcely  exceeding 
the  phyllodia,  with  several  small  globular  heads  of  8 to  12  or  rarely  more  flowers, 
mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  short,  broad.  Petals  smooth.  Pod  straight  or  curved, 
flat,  8 or  4 lines  broad.  Seeds  longitudinal,  close  to  the  upper  suture  ; last  fold 
of  the  funicle  thickened  into  a lateral  club-shaped  aril,  the  lower  ones  very  small. 
— Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  164. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  in  Mueller’s  2nd  Syst.  Cens.  A.  PI. 

Nearly  allied  to  .1.  lunata , and  perhaps  a variety  with  narrower  straighter  phyllodia,  and  some 
specimens  appear  almost  to  pass  into  A.  decora. — Benth. 

39.  A.  lunata  (moon-shaped),  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  452  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  878.  A glabrous  shrub  of  several  feet,  with  angular  branchlets,  often  glaucous. 
Phyllodia  oblong-falcate  or  almost  ovate,  but  very  oblique,  obtuse  or  with  a 
minute  oblique  or  recurved  point,  rarely  lin.  long,  3 to  6 lines  broad,  coriaceous, 
1 -nerved,  obscurely  veined,  the  margins  scarcely  thickened,  the  gland  minute  or 
none.  Racemes  longer  than  the  phyllodia,  with  several  small  heads  of  4 to  10 
comparatively  large  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  short  and  broad.  Petals 
smooth.  Pod  flat,  glaucous,  straight  or  curved,  3 to  4 lines  broad.  Seeds 
longitudinal,  close  to  the  upper  suture,  the  last  fold  of  the  funicle  thickened  into 
a lateral  club-shaped  aril,  the  lower  folds  very  small. — Bot.  Reg.  t.  1352  ; Lodd. 
Bot.  Cab.  t.  384 ; Sweet,  FI.  Austr.  t.  42 ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  17  (partly)  ; 
A.  falcinella,  Tausch.  in  Flora,  18-16,  419  ; A.  brevifolia,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t. 
1235  ?;  A.  oleafolia,  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  405;  A.  dealbata,  A. 
Cunn.  in  Field,  N.  S.  Wales,  345,  not  of  Lindl.;  A.  furfuracea,  G.  Don,  Gen. 
Syst.  ii.  405. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham. 

Without  the  fruit  this  species  may  readily  be  confounded  with  A.  prominent,  which  is  probably 
growing  near  our  southern  border  ; the  phyllodia  are  however  more  coriaceous,  with  the  veins 
less  conspicuous  and  the  flowers  in  the  heads  usually  rather  fewer  and  larger. — Benth. 

40.  A.  podalyriaefolia  (leaves  like  some  Podalyria),  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don, 
Gen.  Syst.  ii.  405;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  374.  A tall  shrub,  more  or  less  mealy- 
glaucous,  and  minutely  pubescent,  rarely  quite  glabrous.  Phyllodia  obovate 
ovate  or  oblong,  more  or  less  oblique,  obtuse  or  narrowed  at  one  or  both  ends, 
mostly  1 to  l^in.  long,  1-nerved,  with  1 or  2 marginal  glands.  Racemes  much 
longer  than  the  phyllodia,  with  several,  often  10  to  20,  small  globular  heads  of 
numerous  small  mostly  5-merous  flowers.  Calyx  turbinate,  sinuate-toothed,  not 
half  so  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  free  or  very  slightly  cohering,  hirsute,  with 
prominent  midribs.  Pod  very  flat,  nearly  fin.  broad,  1 to  several  inches  long, 
glabrous  or  pubescent.  Seeds  ovate,  longitudinal ; funicle  rather  long,  in  short 
folds  under  the  seed,  the  last  fold  slightly  thickened. — A.  Fraseri,  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t. 
171 ; A.  Caleyi,  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  i.  317  (a  stunted  specimen). 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  Fraser,  and  others  ; in  the  interior  about 
Lake  Salvator,  &c.,  Mitchell;  between  the  Suttor  and  Dawson  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Wide  Bay, 
C.  Moore. 

Bark  contains  12-40%  of  tannin. — Staiger. 

Wood  of  a pinkish  colour,  and  nicely  marked. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  133. 

41.  A.  uncifera  (hook-bearing),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Prop.  Austr.  341,  and  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  374.  A shrub  of  about  5ft.,  softly  velvety-pubescent;  branchlets  nearly 
terete.  Phyllodia  obliquely  oblong  or  elliptical-falcate,  narrowed  at  both  ends,  with 
a hooked  point,  1^  to  2in.  long,  4-  to  fin.  broad,  1-nerved,  with  1 to  3 minute 
marginal  glands.  Racemes  rather  longer  than  the  phyllodia,  with  several 
globular  heads,  smaller  than  in  A . podalyriafolia,  on  shorter  peduncles.  Flowers 
also  smaller,  otherwise  like  those  of  that  species,  of  which  this  may  prove  to  be  a 
variety.  Pod  unknown. 

Hab.:  Foot  of  sandstone  rocks  near  Mount  Pluto,  Mitchell. 


Acacia.] 


3tLllI.  LEGUM1N0S.E. 


498 


42.  A.  cultriformis  (the  leaves  formed  like  a kind  of  knife),  A.  Cunn.  in  G. 
Don , Gen.  Syst.  ii.  406  ; Benth.  FI.  Auxtr.  ii.  875.  A tall  bushy  shrub,  glabrous 
and  often  mealy  glaucous  when  young  ; branchlets  angular.  Phyllodia  numerous, 
obliquely  obovate-lanceolate,  recurved-falcate  or  almost  triangular,  mucronulate, 
narrowed  at  the  base,  \ to  fin.  or  rarely  lin.  long,  coriaceous,  1-nerved,  with 
thickened  margins  and  usually  1 marginal  gland,  sometimes  on  a prominent 
angle.  Racemes  numerous,  much  longer  than  the  phyllodia,  consisting  often  of 
10  to  20  globular  heads,  forming  a terminal  leafy  panicle.  Flowers  10  to  20  in 
the  head,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  broad,  lobed,  scarcely  half  as  long  as  the 
corolla.  Petals  smooth.  Pod  very  flat,  glabrous,  glaucous,  2 to  3in.  long  and  3 
to  4 lines  broad.  Seeds  longitudinal  near  the  suture ; last  fold  of  the  funicle 
thickened  into  a lateral  club-shaped  aril,  with  very  small  folds  below  it. — Hook. 
Ic.  PL  t.  170;  Paxt.  Mag.  xi.  113,  with  a fig.;  A.  scapuliformis,  A.  Cunn.  in  G. 
Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  405  (specimen  with  rather  broader  and  shorter  phyllodia)  ; 
Benth.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Macintyre  River,  on  the  border  of  this  colony,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

43.  A.  myrtifolia  (myrtle-leaved),  Willd.  Spec.  PI.  iv.  1054;  Benth.  FI. 
Auxtr.  ii.  376.  A tall  glabrous  shrub,  slightly  glaucous  in  some  varieties  ; 
branches  acutely  angular.  Phyllodia  oblique  or  falcate,  obovate,  ovate-lanceolate, 
lanceolate  or  linear,  usually  acute  or  mucronate  and  narrowed  at  the  base,  1 to 
2in.  long  or  much  longer  when  narrow,  coriaceous,  1-nerved,  with  thickened 
nerve-like  margins,  the  pinnate  veins  rarely  conspicuous,  the  marginal  gland 
below  the  middle.  Racemes  rarely  exceeding  the  phyllodia,  with  several  almost 
sessile  flower-heads,  consisting  of  only  2,  3 or  4 rather  large  flowers,  almost 
always  4-merous.  Calyx  very  short,  broadly  lobed.  Petals  smooth,  separating 
nearly  to  the  base.  Pod  linear,  curved,  flattened,  but  thick,  with  very  thick 
margins,  usually  1 to  2in.  long,  about  2 lines  broad  ; valves  hard  and  almost 
woody.  Seeds  oblong,  longitudinal  ; funicle  very  short,  scarcely  folded,  thickened 
nearly  from  the  base  into  an  almost  cup- shaped  fleshy  aril. — Mimosa  myrtifolia , 
Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  i.  252,  and  Bot.  Nov.  Holl.  51,  t.  15  ; A.  myrtifolia, 
DC.  Prod.  ii.  452  ; Sw.  FI.  Austr.  t.  49 ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  772  ; Hook.  f.  FI. 
Tasm.  i.  107 ; Meissn.  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  14  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Yict.  ii.  19. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 


44.  A.  sublanata  (somewhat  woolly),  Benth.  in  Huey.  Emm.  42,  and  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  378.  A rigid  shrub,  woolly-pubescent  when  young,  at  length  glabrous; 
branches  striate.  Phyllodia  from  broadly  triangular-falcate  and  mucronate  to 
lanceolate-falcate  and  tapering  into  a pungent  point,  rarely  ^-in.  long,  without  any 
or  with  a very  minute  gland,  and  always  with  8 to  5 or  even  more  nerves. 
Stipules  small,  deciduous.  Peduncles  longer  than  the  phyllodia,  bearing  each 
a globular  head  of  20  to  30  flowers,  mostly  5-merous,  glabrous  or  slightly 
hirsute,  the  bract-points  projecting  beyond  the  young  buds.  Calyx  shortly 
toothed,  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Pod  linear,  much  twisted,  about  2 lines 
broad. — A.  pravifolia,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  4,  and  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  117. 

Hab.:  Darling  Downs,  Forde  (F.  v.  M.) 

45.  A.  amblygona  (obtuse-angled),  A.  Cunn.:  Benth.  in  Hook.  Loud. 
Journ.  i.  332,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  378 ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  vii.  3.  Branches 
elongated,  diffuse,  rather  rigid,  terete,  pubescent.  Phyllodia  falcate-lanceolate  or 
almost  triangular,  3 to  4 lines  long,  14-  to  3 lines  broad,  several-nerved,  the  lower 
nerve  produced  into  a sharp  point,  the  upper  margin  much  curved  but  without 
any  glandular  angle.  Peduncles  rarely  exceeding  the  phyllodia,  bearing  each  a 
globular  head  of  about  10  to  15  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  broadly 
cuneate,  cohering  or  at  length  separating,  fully  half  as  long  as  the  corolla. 


494 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS-55. 


[Acacia. 


Petals  smooth,  readily  separating.  Pod  linear,  usually  curved,  to  2 lines 
broad,  contracted  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  ovate,  longitudinal ; funicle  thickened 
into  a lateral  oblong  or  club-shaped  aril,  with  a short  fold  below  it. — A.  Nemstii, 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  3. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  C.  Stuart,  Ncrnst ; towards  Mount 
Pluto,  Mitchell;  between  Suttor  River  and  Peak  Range,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

46.  A.  translucens  (bright),  A.  Cunn.  in  Hook.  lc.  PI.  t.  160  ; Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  379.  A bush  shrub  or  small  tree,  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots 
pubescent  ; brancblets  terete  or  slightly  angular.  Phyllodia  from  obliquely 
obovate  to  narrow-oblong  or  almost  linear,  incurved,  usually  much  undulate, 
mostly  about  Ain.  but  the  lower  ones  sometimes  lin.  long,  obtuse  with  an  oblique 
or  recurved  terminal  gland,  coriaceous,  obscurely  several-nerved.  Peduncles  rigid, 
£ to  lin.  long,  bearing  each  a dense  globular  head  of  numerous  flowers,  mostly 
5-merous.  Calyx  broad,  cup-shaped,  shortly  toothed,  scarcely  half  as  long  as  the 
corolla.  Petals  striate,  but  smaller  and  less  rigid  than  in  A.  impressa.  Pod  1 to 
ljin.  long,  flat  but  thick,  and  almost  woody,  obtusely  hooked  at  the  end,  about 
2 lines  broad  above  the  middle  and  gradually  narrowed  into  a long  stipes, 
obliquely  veined,  partitioned  inside  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  oblong,  oblique ; 
funicle  slightly  folded  and  gradually  dilated  into  a cup-shaped  aril  at  the  base  of 
the  seed. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  B.  Brown. 

The  pod  is  that  of  some  Julijiorte,  but  has  only  been  seen  in  the  narrow-leaved  speci- 
mens.— Bentli. 

47.  A.  impressa  (referring  to  depression  on  seed).  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn. 
Soc.  iii.  133;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  380.  A tall  shrub,  the  branches  slightly 
angular,  more  or  less  pubescent  as  well  as  the  foliage.  Phyllodia  obovate  or 
obovate-oblong,  very  oblique,  undulate,  obtuse  or  with  a small  glandular  point, 
^ to  f or  rarely  lin.  long,  with  3 to  5 nerves  more  prominent  than  in 
A.  translucens,  and  anastomosing  veins.  Peduncles  about  as  long  as  the 
phyllodia,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of  about  12  to  20  flowers,  mostly 
5-merous.  Sepals  distinct  or  slightly  coherent,  spathulate.  Petals  rigid  and 
striate,  united  at  the  base.  Pod  straight  or  nearly  so,  thinly  coriaceous,  flat  with 
thickened  margins,  about  Ain.  broad,  very  glutinous  and  villous.  Seeds  oval- 
oblong,  transverse,  the  central  area  much  depressed ; funicle  forming  several 
folds,  the  last  2 or  3 dilated  into  a rather  small  aril  at  the  base  of  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Northern  interior. 

Very  near  A.  translucens  in  foliage  and  flowers,  but  with  a very  different  fruit. — Bentli. 

48.  A.  elongata  (lengthened),  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  451  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  381.  A tall  shrub,  glabrous,  or  the  young  shoots  silky-pubescent.  Phyllodia 
narrow-linear,  obtuse,  or  with  a small  oblique  or  hooked  point,  2 to  3 or  even  4in. 
long,  1 to  1A  or  rarely  above  2 lines  broad,  with  3 prominent  nerves,  and  when 
broad,  a few  oblique  veins  between  them.  Peduncles  solitary  or  in  pairs,  not 
exceeding  Ain.  and  usually  much  shorter,  slender  and  pubescent,  bearing  a globular 
head  of  numerous  (30  or  more)  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  obtusely  lobed, 
fully  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  smooth,  with  the  midrib  slightly  pro- 
minent. Pod  linear,  straight,  flat,  1A  to  2 lines  broad.  Seeds  longitudinal,  the 
last  folds  of  the  short  funicle  dilated  into  a small  aril  at  the  base  of  the  seed. — 
Bot.  Mag.  t.  3337  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  24  ; A.  hebecephala , A.  Cunn.  in  Lond. 
Hort.  Brit.  406. 

Hab.:  Southern  Queensland,  Rev.  B.  Scortechini. 

This  species  differs  from  A.  trinervata  chiefly  in  the  long  narrow  phyllodia,  not  pungent,  when 
very  narrow  they  are  almost  like  those  of  the  Calamiformes.  In  some  garden  specimens  the 
nerves  almost  disappear  as  represented  in  the  above  quoted  figure  ; and  then  it  is  not  very  easy 
to  distinguish  them  from  those  specimens  of  A.  viscidula  in  which  the  nerves  are  very  faint. — 
Bentli. 


Pl.  XV//. 


Ac^OjCpcxy  7 ' inlets  , BaiL. 


<sov?lzt/i£  Offict 

Jirisbans,.  (/ 


/•:  C.  WzLLs. 


Acacia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSvE. 


495 


49.  A.  Simsii  (after  Dr.  J.  Sims),  A.  Cunn .;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond.  Journ. 
i.  368,  and  FI.  Anstr.  ii.  382  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  vii.  10.  A tall  glabrous  shrub 
with  slender  branches  scarcely  angular.  Phyllodia  linear  or  lanceolate,  usually 
falcate,  obtuse  or  mucronate,  much  narrowed  towards  the  base,  2 to  5in.  long, 

to  2 or  rarely  3 lines  broad,  in  the  ordinary  form  with  3 or  sometimes  only  2 
prominent  nerves,  smooth  and  finely  veined  between  them.  Peduncles  solitary  or 
in  pairs,  slender,  rarely  above  3 lines  long,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of  20  to 
30  flowers,  mostly  G-merous.  Calyx  nearly  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  lobed, 
and  readily  separating  into  distinct  sepals.  Petals  smooth,  distinct.  Pod  straight, 
flat  or  undulate,  acuminate,  2 to  3 lines  broad.  Seeds  compressed-globular, 
longitudinal  ; funicle  with  the  last  fold  shortly  thickened  into  a clavate  aril  about 
half  as  long  as  the  seed,  with  a short  filiform  fold  below  it. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown,  Henne ; Bay  of  Inlets,  Banks  and 
Solander ; rocky  hills,  Cleveland  Bay,  A.  Cunningham;  Cape  Upstart,  Burdekin  Expedition; 
Port  Denison,  Fitzalan ; Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallachy ; bed  of  the  Belyando,  Mitchell;  also  in 
Leichhardt’s  collection. 

Var.  multisiliqua.  Phyllodia  shorter,  rather  broader,  and  nearly  straight,  with  3 prominent 
nerves  and  scarcely  veined  between  them.  Pod  narrow. — On  first  seeing  B.  Brown’s  specimens 
from  the  Carpentaria  Islands,  they  looked  so  different  from  the  ordinary  form  that  I was  inclined 
to  adopt  them  as  a distinct  species  under  Brown’s  name  of  A.  multisiliqua,  but  I have  since  found 
that  the  two  forms  pass  one  into  the  other  there  as  in  other  localities,  and  both  phyllodia  may  be 
found  even  on  the  same  specimen  on  different  branches,  depending  perhaps  sometimes  on 
differences  in  comparative  luxuriance. — Benth. 

50.  A.  homalophylla  (smooth-leaved),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ. 
i.  365  (there  spelt  omalopliylla),  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  383  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  vi.  7. 
Gidgee.  “Wong-arrah,”  Cloncurry,  Palmer.  A small  tree,  glabrous  or  the  foliage 
minutely  hoary  or  pale ; branchlets  at  first  slightly  angular.  Phyllodia  lanceolate- 
falcate,  narrow -oblong  or  linear,  obtuse  with  a small  oblique  point,  narrowed  at 
the  base,  1 to  3in.  long,  1 to  4 lines  broad,  thick,  very  finely  striate  with  parallel 
nerves  only  to  be  seen  under  a lens.  Peduncles  in  pairs  or  clustered  on  a very 
short  common  peduncle,  bearing  dense  globular  heads  of  numerous  flowers, 
mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  cuneate  or  spathulate,  free  or  slightly  connate,  more 
than  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  smooth,  free.  Pod  linear,  usually 
glaucous,  slightly  curved,  2 to  3 lines  broad,  longitudinally  veined ; valves 
coriaceous,  convex  over  the  seeds,  contracted  between  them.  Seeds  oval-oblong, 
longitudinal ; funicle  short,  much  folded  and  dilated  almost  from  the  base  into  a 
short  oblique  aril. — F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  28. 

Hab.:  Inland  localities. 

Gum  eaten ; the  wood  used  for  boomerangs,  also  the  favourite  wood  for  spears,  on  the 
Cloncurry. — Palmer. 

Wood  dark,  close-grained,  prettily  marked,  hard,  heavy. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Hoods  No.  I33a. 

51.  A.  georginae  (found  on  Georgina  River),  Bail.Bot.  Bull.  xiii.  Georgina 
Gidgee.  A large  shrub  or  small  tree,  with  dense  spreading  head.  Has  a strong 
disagreeable  scent.  Branches  and  trunk  usually  very  crooked,  bark  thick  and 
rough  ; young  branchlets  flattened  or  triangular,  and  like  the  foliage  all  more  or 
less  clothed  with  a hoary  tomentum.  Phyllodia  lanceolate-falcate,  2£  to  3iin. 
long,  3 to  4 lines  broad,  much  narrowed  towards  the  base,  and  bearing  at  the 
apex  a small  thickened  oblique  point ; texture  thick,  hard  and  brittle ; the 
parallel  nerves  2,  3 or  4,  but  like  the  finer  veins  often  very  obscure  from  the  thick 
substance  of  the  phyllodia.  Flowers  not  available.  Pod  falcate  or  curved  into  a 
circle,  very  obtuse  at  each  end  ; thin,  flat,  wavy,  and  elegantly  marked  with 
branched  reticulate  veins,  2 or  3in.  long,  fin.  broad.  Seeds  few,  distant, 
transverse,  very  flat,  about  5 lines  broad,  surrounded  by  a narrow  wing-like 
border,  glossy-brown,  funicle  thickened  into  a narrow  clavate  aril,  below  which 
are  1 or  2 folds. 

Hab.:  Georgina  Biver, 


496  XLIII.  LEGtJMINOSifi.  [Acacia. 

This  new  species  closely  resembles  A.  homalophylla,  A.  Cunn.,  the  phyllodia  being  the  same  in 
form  and  possessing  the  same  disagreeable  odour.  In  pod  and  seed  the  resemblance  approaches 
A.  pendula,  A.  Cunn.,  from  which  the  distinction  is  also  considerable.  The  plant  is  the  one 
which,  under  the  name  of  Gidgee,  was  reported  to  have  caused  the  death  of  a number  of  fat  cattle 
on  Roxborough  Downs. 

52.  A.  pendula  (branches  pendulous),  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii. 
404  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  383 ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  vi.  8.  Weeping  Myall.  A 
handsome  tree,  the  foliage  pale  or  ash-coloured,  with  a minute  pubescence ; 
branchlets  usually  pendulous,  slightly  angular,  soon  terete.  Phyllodia  linear- 
lanceolate,  falcate,  acuminate,  narrowed  towards  the  base,  2 to  3in.  long,  rigidly 
coriaceous,  very  finely  striate,  with  numerous  parallel  nerves,  only  to  be  seen 
under  a lens.  Peduncles  usually  clustered  on  a very  short  common  peduncle, 
rarely  above  2 lines  long,  bearing  each  a small  globular  head  of  about  12  to  20 
flowers,  mostly  5-merous,  much  smaller  than  in  A.  homalophylla.  Calyx  turbinate 
and  lobed,  but  readily  separating  into  distinct  sepals.  Petals  smooth.  Pod 
linear,  but  very  flat,  and  fully  5 lines  broad,  thinly  coriaceous,  transversely 
reticulate,  the  sutures  bordered  by  a very  narrow  wing.  Seeds  nearly  orbicular  ; 
funicle  thickened  into  a narrow  clavate  aril,  and  scarcely  folded  below  it,  but  not 
seen  perfect. — A.  leucophylla,  Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Three  Exped.  ii.  13. 

Hab.:  On  the  Maranoa,  Mitchell:  Dalby  and  other  inland  localities. 

Without  the  fruit  the  specimens  are  very  difficult  to  distinguish  from  those  of  A.  homalophylla. 
In  both  species,  but  especially  in  this  one,  3 of  the  nerves  of  the  phyllodia  are  sometimes  slightly 
prominent. — Benth. 

Wood  fragrant,  dark,  hard  and  close-grained  ; much  prized  by  cabinetmakers. — Bailey's  Cat. 
Ql.  Woods  No.  134. 

53.  A.  Oswaldi  (after  S.  Oswald),  F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  27,  and  Fragtn. 
iv.  5 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  384  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  vi.  10.  A rigid  bushy  shrub, 
attaining  8 to  10ft.,  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  hoary  or  silky-pubescent ; 
branchlets  slightly  angular.  Phyllodia  falcate-lanceolate,  varying  to  linear  or 
oblong-lanceolate,  mostly  14-  to  2in.  long,  rigid,  with  a short  usually  incurved 
innocuous  or  scarcely  pungent  point,  much  narrowed  at  the  base,  with  numerous 
slightly  prominent  nerves,  parallel  or  anastomosing  when  the  phyllodium  is 
broad.  Flower-heads  small,  globular,  sessile  or  nearly  so,  solitary  or  in  pairs  or 
clusters,  containing  about  10  to  15  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  linear- 
cuneate  or  spathulate,  free.  Petals  smooth,  usually  pubescent.  Pod  long  and 
much  curved  or  twisted,  3 to  4 lines  broad,  hard  or  almost  woody;  valves  convex 
over  the  seeds,  slightly  contracted  between  them.  Seeds  large,  ovate,  longi- 
tudinal ; last  fold  of  the  funicle  dilated  into  a broad,  obliquely  cup-shaped  fleshy 
aril,  the  lower  folds  short  and  filiform  or  slightly  dilated. 

Hab.:  Common  inland. 

54.  A.  COriacea  (hide-like  leaves),  DC.  Mem.  Ley.  446,  and  Prod.  ii.  451 ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  385  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  vi.  6.  Ashy-grey,  with  the  young 
shoots  silky-hoary  or  almost  golden  ; branchlets  terete.  Phyllodia  long-linear, 
straight  or  curved,  obtuse,  narrowed  towards  the  base,  often  4'ft.  long  or  more,  1 
to  24-  lines  wide,  thickly  coriaceous,  with  numerous  fine  and  closely  packed  longi- 
tudinal nerves,  only  visible  under  a lens.  Peduncles  usually  in  pairs,  J to  4-in. 
long,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of  20  to  25  flowers,  mostly  5-merous,  hoary- 
pubescent  in  the  bud.  Calyx  f line  long,  tubular,  with  ciliate  lobes.  Petals 
rather  longer,  united  above  the  middle.  Pod  6 to  9in.  long,  almost  moniliform  ; 
valves  coriaceous,  very  convex,  4 to  5 lines  broad,  oblong  and  striate  over  the 
seeds,  much  contracted  between  them.  Seeds  longitudinal,  distant ; funicle  folded 
and  much  dilated  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  in  Mueller’s  2nd  Syst.  Cens.  FI. 


Acacia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


497 


55.  A.  stenophylla  (narrow-leaved),  A.  Cunn.\  Benth.  in  Hook.  Loud. 
Journ.  i.  366,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  385  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  vi.  5.  Dalby  Myall.  A 
very  hard-wooded  tree,  quite  glabrous,  with  angular  branchlets.  Phyllodia 
long-linear,  acuminate  or  falcate,  much  narrowed  at  the  base,  bin.  to  1ft.  long, 
about  2 to  2£  lines  broad,  thinly  coriaceous,  not  at  all  hoary,  finely  striate, 
with  numerous  prominent  parallel  nerves.  Peduncles  under  ^in.  long,  usually 
in  short  racemes  of  3 to  6,  but  sometimes  solitary,  bearing  each  a globular  head 
of  20  to  30  or  more  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  half  as  long  as  the  corolla, 
with  short  broad  densely  ciliate  lobes.  Petals  pubescent.  Pod  6 to  8in.  long, 
moniliform ; valves  coriaceous,  4 to  5 lines  broad  and  convex  over  the 
seeds,  but  not  striate,  much  narrowed  between  them.  Seeds  ovate,  longitudinal ; 
funicle  in  short  folds,  the  last  slightly  thickened  into  a small  aril. — F.  v.  M. 
PI.  Viet.  ii.  26. 

Hab.:  Maranoa  and  Narran  Rivers,  Mitchell. 

A.  sericoplvylla,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  122,  is  probably  a narrow-leaved  form  of  this 
species. — Benth. 

A useful  cabinet  wood,  dark,  prettily  marked,  close-grained  and  very  hard.— Bailey's  Cat.  Ql. 
Woods  No.  135. 

56.  A . viscidula  (sticky),  A.  Gunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lund.  Journ.  i.  363, 
and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  387.  A shrub,  more  or  less  pubescent  and  resinous-viscid  ; 
branchlets  terete  or  nearly  so.  Phyllodia  narrow-linear,  with  a small  usually 
hooked  point,  rather  incurved,  narrowed  at  the  base,  2 to  24-in.  long,  1 to  14  line 
broad,  coriaceous,  several-nerved.  Peduncles  very  short,  generally  in  pairs, 
rarely  clustered.  Flowers  numerous,  in  dense  globular  or  slightly  ovoid  heads, 
mostly  5-merous  but  often  4-merous.  Bracts  acuminate.  Sepals  narrow- 
spathulate,  quite  free  or  scarcely  connected  at  the  base.  Petals  pubescent.  Pod 
linear,  straight,  acuminate,  pubescent,  about  2 lines  broad  ; valves  nearly  fiat, 
with  thickened  margins.  Seeds  oblong,  longitudinal  ; funicle  with  the  last  two 
or  three  folds  thickened  into  an  obliquely  cup-shaped  or  apparently  2-lobed  aril 
at  the  base  of  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Glasshouse  Mountains  and  Stanthorpe. 

Var.  angustifolia.  Phyllodia  about  f line  broad.  Flower-heads  smaller. 

57.  A.  ixiophylla  (glutinous),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Loud.  Journ.  i.  364,  and  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  387.  A glabrous  or  pubescent  glutinous  shrub  of  several  feet.  Phyllodia 
oblong,  lanceolate  or  broadly  linear,  usually  oblique  or  falcate,  obtuse  or  with  a 
small  callous  recurved  point  or  gland,  f to  14  or  rarely  nearly  2in.  long,  2 to  3 or 
rarely  4 lines  broad,  coriaceous  striate,  with  numerous  fine  but  prominent  nerves, 
anastomosing  when  the  phyllodium  is  broad.  Peduncles  in  pairs  on  short 
racemes  of  3 or  4,  bearing  each  a small  globular  head  of  15  to  20  or  rarely  more 
flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  narrow-spathulate,  quite  free.  Petals  free  or 
readily  separating.  Pod  very  flexuose,  hispid  or  glabrous,  2 to  3 lines  broad. 
Seeds  oblong,  longitudinal ; funicle  dilated  into  an  obliquely  oblong  or  club- 
shaped  aril,  not  one-third  as  long  as  the  seed,  and  very  shortly  filiform  and 
folded  below  it. — A.  tjlutinosa,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  6 (the  western  specimens). 

Hab.:  In  the  interior  towards  Mount  Pluto,  Mitchell;  between  Severn  and  Condamine  Rivers, 
Leichhardt ; Stanthorpe. 

58.  A.  dictyophleba  (veins  netted),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  128;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  388  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  viii.  7.  Glabrous  but  very  resinous  ; branchlets 
nearly  terete.  Phyllodia  cuneate-oblong  to  lanceolate-falcate,  very  obtuse,  with  a 
small  callous  point,  much  narrowed  at  the  base,  2 to  Sin.  long,  2 to  5 lines  broad, 
very  coriaceous,  with  several  nerves  and  intermediate  reticulations,  all  much 
raised,  and  scabrous  with  a resinous  exudation.  Peduncles  solitary,  6 to  8 lines 
long,  bearing  each  a very  dense  globular  head  of  5-merous  dowers.  Calyx  more 


498 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[Acacia. 


than  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  very  thin,  with  thickened  resinous  lobes  or  teeth. 
Pod  flat,  about  3in.  long,  -|in.  broad.  Seeds  transverse.  Funicle  folded  and 
enlarging  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Inland  localities. 


59.  A.  venulosa  (veiny),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond.  Journ.  i.  366,  and  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  388.  A tall  shrub,  softly  pubescent  or  glabrous  and  sometimes  slightly 
viscid ; branchlets  angular.  Phyllodia  falcate-oblong  or  lanceolate,  narrowed  at 
each  end,  mostly  2 to  3in.  long,  J to  ^in.  broad,  very  rigid,  many-nerved  and 
strongly  veined,  with  about  3 nerves  more  prominent  than  the  rest.  Peduncles 
in  pairs  or  clusters  or  on  a very  short  common  peduncle,  mostly  2 to  4 lines  long, 
rather  thick,  tomentose,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of  above  20  flowers,  mostly 
5-merous.  Sepals  narrow-spathulate,  usually  united  below  the  middle.  Petals 
smooth.  Pod  linear,  straight  or  curved,  pubescent  when  young,  1 to  2in.  long, 
about  3 lines  broad  ; valves  convex  over  the  seeds,  depressed,  but  not  contracted 
between  them.  Seeds  ovate,  longitudinal,  the  last  2 or  3 folds  of  the  funicle 
thickened  into  a concave  or  2-lobed  aril  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Inland  localities. 

60.  A.  melanoxylon  (black  wood),  Ii.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hurt.  Kew,  cd.  3,  v.  462  ; 

Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  388.  A hard-wooded  tree,  attaining  a very  large  size,  but 
sometimes  flowering  when  under  20ft.,  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  minutely 
pubescent ; branchlets  angular.  Phyllodia  falcate-oblong  or  almost  lanceolate, 
3 to  4in.  long  in  the  common  varieties,  i to  lin.  broad,  obtuse  or  rarely  almost 
acute,  much  narrowed  towards  the  base,  coriaceous,  with  several  longitudinal 
nerves  and  numerous  anastomosing  veins.  Peduncles  3 to  4 lines  long,  few 
together  in  a short  raceme  or  sometimes  solitary,  bearing  each  a very  dense 
globular  head  of  30  to  50  or  more  flowers,  mostly  5-merous  and  often  so  closely 
packed  in  the  head  that  the  calyxes  cohere.  Calyx  more  than  half  as  long  as  the 

corolla,  thin  and  shortly  toothed.  Petals  connate  above  the  middle.  Pod 

elongated,  flat,  often  curved  into  a circle,  3 to  4 lines  broad,  with  thickened  nerve- 
like margins.  Seeds  nearly  orbicular ; funicle  very  long,  dilated  and  coloured 
from  the  base,  very  flexuose,  more  or  less  encircling  the  seed  in  double  folds. — 
Wendl.  Comm.  Acac.  24,  t.  6 ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  452  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  1659  ; Lodd. 

Bot.  Cab.  t.  630 ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  109  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  28 ; 

A.  arcuata,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.  and  in  Spreng.  Syst.  iii.  135  (by  mistake  attributed  to 
Labillardiere). 

Hab.:  Near  Stanthorpe. 

The  wood,  known  to  the  colonists  under  the  name  of  “ Blackwood,”  and  the  less  appropriate 
one  of  “ Lightwood,”  is  celebrated  for  hardness  and  durability. 

A.  brevipes,  A.  Cunn.  in  Bot.  Mag.  t.  3358,  from  the  single  specimen  preserved  of  the  cultivated 
plant  described,  appears  to  be  a variety  of  A.  melanoxylon , with  longer  more  falcate  phyllodia, 
attaining  5 to  7in. — Benth. 

61.  A.  implexa  (plicate),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  i.  368,  and  FI. 
A ustr.  ii.  389 ; F.  v.M.  lc.  lJcc.  viii.  2.  A glabrous  tree,  sometimes  slightly 
glaucous ; branchlets  terete  or  nearly  so.  Phyllodia  lanceolate-falcate,  more 
acuminate,  more  narrowed  at  the  base  and  thinner  than  in  A.  melanoxylon,  mostly 
5 or  6in.  long  or  more,  with  several  slender  longitudinal  nerves  and  fine  veins. 
Peduncles  few,  in  a very  short  raceme,  more  slender  than  in  A.  melanoxylon, 
bearing  each  a small  dense  head  of  numerous  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx 
scarcely  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  turbinate.  Petals  smooth,  united  to  the 
middle.  Pod  narrow-linear,  much  curved  and  twisted,  2 or  rarely  nearly  3 lines 
broad,  contracted  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  ovate-oblong,  longitudinal ; funicle 
dilated  and  coloured  almost  from  the  base,  much  folded  under  the  seed,  but  not 
encircling  it. — F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  29. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  Dawson  and  Burnett  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller ; common. 


Acacia.]  XLIII.  LEGUMINOSHC.  499 

The  pods  on  the  Queensland  tree  agree  better  with  the  above  description  than  with  Mueller’s 
plate  above  quoted. 

Wood  prettily  marked,  the  outer  light-coloured,  the  heartwood  greyish-brown ; a useful 
cabinet  wood. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  J Foods  No.  136. 

62.  A.  harpophylla  (boomerang-shaped),  F.  v.  M.  Herb Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  389  ; F.  r.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  vi.  9.  Brigalow.  “ Ogarah,”  St.  George,  Wedd. 
A large  tree,  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  minutely  hoary  ; branchlets  slightly 
angular.  Phyllodia  falcate-lanceolate,  mostly  6 to  8in.  long,  narrowed  but  obtuse 
at  the  end,  much  narrowed  at  the  base,  coriaceous,  pale  or  glaucous,  with  several 
not  very  prominent  nerves  and  scarcely  veined  between  them.  Peduncles  slender, 
i to  fin.  long,  clustered  or  rarely  in  a very  short  raceme,  bearing  each  a small 
globular  head  of  about  12  to  15  mostly  5-merous  flowers.  Sepals  spathulate,  not 
half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  free  or  slightly  connected  below  the  middle.  Petals 
smooth,  free.  Pod  narrow,  5 to  Gin.  long,  slightly  contracted  between  the  seeds, 
sharp  at  the  apex.  Seeds  longitudinal. 

Hab.:  Rockhampton,  Tliozet.  A very  common  inland  species,  forming  large  scrubs. 

Yields  a light  or  dark-brown  gum,  which  is  entirely  soluble  in  cold  water,  forming  a mucilage 
as  sticky  as  arabic  gum. — Lauterer. 

Wood  brown,  close-grained,  elastic,  slightly  scented,  and  durable  ; a good  cabinet  wood. — 
Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  137. 

63.  A.  excelsa  (tall),  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  225,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
390.  Ironwood  Wattle.  “Tooloo,”  St.  George,  Wedd.  A large  forest  tree; 
branchlets  slender,  terete  or  nearly  so,  glabrous  or  rarely  minutely  pubescent. 
Phyllodia  oblong-falcate,  rather  obtuse  or  mucronulate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  2 
to  3in.  long,  ^ to  fin.  broad,  thinly  coriaceous,  with  5 to  7 nerves,  and  smooth  or 
faintly  veined  between  them.  Peduncles  solitary,  in  pairs  or  clusters,  sometimes 
not  2 lines,  in  other  specimens  nearly  ^in.  long,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of 
numerous  (20  to  30)  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  distinct.  Petals  smooth. 
Pod  straight,  flat,  about  3 lines  broad,  thinly  coriaceous,  the  sutures  narrow- 
edged  or  almost  winged,  not  usually  dehiscent  but  hardening  over  the  seeds  and 
readily  breaking  off  between  them.  Seeds  ovate,  longitudinal ; funicle  short  and 
filiform,  neither  folded  nor  enlarged. — A.  Daintreana,  F.  v.  M.  Eragm.  iv.  6. 

Hab.:  Near  Lake  Salvator,  Mitchell;  Peak  Downs,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Clarke  River,  Daintree  ; also 
in  Bowman's  collection. 

Very  closely  allied  to,  and  perhaps  a variety  of,  A.  laurifolia , Willd.,  from  New  Caledonia  and 
the  Pacific  Islands,  differing  chiefly  in  the  narrower  phyllodia  and  pods. — Benth. 

Wood  very  hard,  dark  and  close-grained  ; most  useful  where  strength  and  durability  are 
required. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  1 Foods  No.  137a. 

64.  A.  complanata  (flattened  branches),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Land. 
Journ.  i.  369,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  390.  A tree,  glabrous  ; branchlets  flattened, 
bordered  by  2 or  rarely  3 acute  angles  or  narrow  wings.  Phyllodia  oval  or 
oblong,  obtuse,  2 to  3in.  long,  ^ to  lin.  broad,  thinly  coriaceous,  with  5 to  9 or 
even  more  longitudinal  nerves  and  a few  fine  veins  between  them.  Peduncles 
slender,  about  -|in.  long,  in  axillary  clusters  often  of  6 to  8 or  more,  or  by  the 
abortion  of  the  upper  phyllodia  forming  an  irregular  terminal  raceme,  bearing- 
each  a globular  head  of  numerous  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  free, 
spathulate.  Petals  smooth,  free.  Pod  curved,  acuminate,  very  flat,  3 to  4 lines 
broad,  the  upper  suture  norve-like  or  with  a narrow  border.  Seeds  oblong ; funicle 
in  the  Banksiati  specimens  short  and  not  dilated,  but  not  quite  perfect,  in  F.  v. 
Mueller’s  specimens  elongated,  more  or  less  dilated  from  near  the  base,  and 
encircling  the  seed  in  a single  fold. — A.  anceps,  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  167,  not  of  DC. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Sola  rider ; Wide  Bay,  Bidwill,  Moore;  Dumaresq  River, 
A.  Cunningham;  Brisbane  River,  Fraser,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others. 

Phyllodia  often  disfigured  by  the  blight  fungus  Diplodia  liclienopsis. — Cke.  and  Mass. 

Wood  of  a yellowish  colour,  tough,  with  a close  grain. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  U'oods  No.  137b. 


500 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[Acacia. 


65.  A.  homaloelada  (alluding  to  the  smooth  hranchlets),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm. 
xi.  84,  ic.  Dec.  viii.  5.  A glabrous  shrub  of  about  5ft.,  the  branches  flattened 
and  drooping,  scarcely  exceeding  2 lines  broad.  Phyllodia  thick  chartaceous, 
falcate-lanceolate,  narrow,  much  above  the  centre,  2 to  4in.  long,  4 to  8 lines 
broad,  3-nerved,  and  the  gland  near  the  base.  Peduncles  axillary  in  clusters  of 
from  2 to  5,  slender,  J to  fin.  long,  each  bearing  a globular  head  of  many  flowers. 
Bracts  or  sepals  5,  with  rhomboid-acuminate  heads  on  rather  long  claws.  Corolla 
infundibuliform,  5-toothed,  glabrous,  scarcely  over  1 line  long.  Pod  nearly 
straight,  2 to  4in.  long,  4 to  5 lines  broad.  Seeds  rotund,  much  compressed. 
Funicle  three-parts  surrounding  the  seed  but  not  thickened  or  folded  any  more 
than  necessary  at  the  base. 

Hab.:  Hinehinbrook  Island,  J.  Dallachy  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 

66.  A.  binervata  (two-nerved),  DC.  Prod.  ii.  <152;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
390.  A tall  shrub  or  a tree  attaining  sometimes  30  to  40ft.,  glabrous,  with 
slightly  angular  branchlets,  soon  becoming  terete.  Phyllodia  falcate,  oblong  or 
lanceolate,  narrowed  at  each  end,  mostly  3 to  4in.  long,  with  2 or  3 longitudinal 
nerves  and  pinnately  veined  between  them,  the  marginal  gland  below  the  middle 
rather  conspicuous.  Peduncles  rather  slender,  3 to  8,  at  first  in  an  axillary 
raceme,  but  after  flowering  the  raceme  often  grows  out  into  a leafy  branch  with 
the  peduncles  at  the  base,  each  bearing  a globular  head  of  about  20  flowers, 
mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  scarcely  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  sinuate-toothed. 
Petals  smooth.  Pod  long,  flat  and  very  thin,  about  Jin.  broad.  Seeds  obovate, 
longitudinal  along  the  centre  of  the  pod ; funicle  folded  and  dilated  under  the 
seed  but  not  surrounding  it. — A.  umbrosa,  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii. 
405  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  3338;  Maid,  and  Camp.,  FI.  PI.  N.S.W.,  No.  19. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 

Allied  in  some  respects  to  A.  penninervi s,  differing  in  the  venation  of  the  phyllodia,  in  the  pod 
and  seeds,  &e. 

Some  specimens  of  Mitchell’s  have  narrow  much  more  coriaceous  phyllodia  and  very  small 
flower-heads,  but  without  the  fruit  it  cannot  be  determined  whether  they  are  a distinct  species 
or  not. — Benth. 

67.  A.  Bakeri  (after  Pt.  T.  Baker),  Maid.  L.  Soc.  N.S.W.,2nd  Series,  x.  337, 
pi.  xxi.  A tall  erect  tree,  bark  moderately  smooth,  branchlets  somewhat  flattened. 
Phyllodia  sessile,  broad-lanceolate,  much  narrowed  towards  each  end,  obtuse, 
usually  3 to  4in.  long  and  lin.  broad,  but  sometimes  much  larger,  3-nerved,  with 
an  occasional  short  one  terminating  in  a gland  near  the  base,  penniveined 
between  the  nerves,  margins  thickened  and  undulate,  thin-coriaceous.  Peduncles 
slender,  6 lines  long,  mostly  in  clusters  of  3 to  10,  forming  axillary  racemes 
mostly  exceeding  the  phyllodia,  bearing  small  loose  heads  (about  20)  of  few,  pale- 
colored  flowers,  mostly  4-merous.  Calyx  short,  pubescent  or  softly  villous, 
separating  at  length  into  spathulate  lobes.  Petals  pubescent,  softly  villous. 
Pod  straight,  flat,  about  8in.  long,  Jin.  broad,  thin,  very  slightly  contracted 
between  the  seeds.  Seeds  flat,  ovate,  longitudinal ; funicle  short  and  filiform, 
neither  folded  nor  enlarged.— Maiden  l.c. 

Hab.:  Eumundi,  N.  Coast  Railway,  where  it  forms  tall  erect  trees  on  the  hillsides. 

I have  not  seen  flowers  of  the  Queensland  tree,  therefore  some  doubt  remains  as  to  its  identity  ; 
it  may  prove  only  A.  binervata,  DC.;  from  which  Mr.  Maiden  says  his  new  species  differs  in 
having  flattened,  not  terete,  branchlets ; petals  and  sepals  villous,  not  smooth  and  glabrous ; 
funicle  short  and  filiform,  not  folded  or  enlarged,  whereas  in  A.  binervata  the  funicle  is  said  to 
be  folded  and  dilated  under  the  seed. 

Wood  of  a yellowish  colour,  prettily  marked,  close-grained,  hard  and  tough  ; a pretty  timber 
for  cabinet-work. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  137c. 

68.  A.  R>Othii  (after  Dr.  Roth),  Bail.  Ql.  Agri.  Journ.  vi.  39  (with  a fig.) 
“ Lar,”  Batavia  River,  Both.  Branchlets  slender,  compressed.  Phyllodia  mem- 
branous, linear-lanceolate,  6 to  7in.  long,  6 to  8 lines  broad  near  the  centre, 


Pl.  XV///. 


Acaf'Jtv  Jtoth  ii , BaiL. 


Govfltihn.  Office 

Brisbane,,  if 


FC  Wills 


Acacia.'] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


501 


slightly  falcate,  with  2 or  3 principal  nerves  more  or  less  confluent  at  the  base, 
petiole  portion  short,  very  glandular-angular,  with  a small  sunk  oval  gland  on 
margin  of  the  lamina  quite  at  the  base,  apex  usually  obtuse  and  glandular- 
apiculate.  Judging  from  a pod  attached  to  one  of  the  specimens  received,  the 
flowers  are  borne  in  globose  heads  on  somewhat  short  peduncles,  or  perhaps 
sometimes  forming  few-branched  panicles.  Pod  fiat,  woody,  about  4in.  long  and 
over  1-J-in.  broad  in  the  upper  oblong  half,  thence  somewhat  abruptly  tapering  to 
an  acute,  straight,  or  curved  base  ; sutures  bordered  with  a narrow  edge,  the 
valves  prominently  transversely  veined  outside  and  reticulate  almost  alveolate 
inside.  Seeds  transverse  along  the  centre  of  the  pod  and  sunk  in  the  substance 
of  the  valves,  oval-oblong,  about  5 lines  long ; funicle  straight,  expanding  at 
the  top  into  a cup-shaped  arillus  enclosing  about  one-third  of  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Mouth  of  the  Batavia  River,  Dr.  W.  E.  Roth. 

69.  A.  sericata  (silky),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond.  Journ.  i.  380,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  391.  Pale,  with  a very  minute  almost  mealy  down,  or  glabrous  and 
glaucous  ; branchlets  terete  or  nearly  so.  Phyllodia  broadly  falcate;  obtuse  but 
narrowed  at  both  ends,  mostly  3 to  4in.  long,  1 to  liin.  broad  in  the  middle,  or 
on  barren  shoots  much  longer  and  narrower,  with  3 or  4 principal  nerves,  of 
which  1 or  2 confluent  with  the  lower  margin  of  the  base,  transversely  reticulate 
between  them,  the  outer  or  upper  margin  often  sinuate.  Flowers  not  seen.  Pod 
very  flat,  glaucous,  8 to  Sin.  long,  1 to  l|in.  broad,  sutures  bordered  with  a 
narrow  edge  ; valves  coriaceous,  hard  when  ripe,  with  raised  reticulations.  Seeds 
transverse,  not  seen  perfect. — A.  platycarpa,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  145. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria  (specimens  with  unripe  fruit),  F.  v.  Mueller ; Etheridge,  Armit. 

70.  A.  flavescens  (yellowish),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond.  Journ.  i. 
881,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  391  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  viii.  9.  Young  shoots  clothed  with 
a hoary  or  yellowish  almost  fleecy  tomentum,  soon  wearing  off ; branchlets 
angular.  Phyllodia  broadly  falcate,  acuminate,  cuneate  at  the  base,  4 to  8in. 
long,  1 to  2 or  even  3in.  broad,  with  usually  3 nerves,  the  lowest  carried  on  to  a 
terminal  gland,  the  2 others  ending  in  small  glands  on  the  upper  margin,  veins 
transversely  reticulate  between  them.  Flowers  in  small  globular  heads,  on  short 
peduncles  in  an  irregular  terminal  panicle,  and  apparently  5-merous,  with  narrow 
sepals,  but  very  imperfect  in  our  specimens.  Pod  straight  or  curved,  very  flat, 
3 to  5in.  long,  fin.  broad,  coriaceous,  reticulate,  with  slightly  thickened  margins. 
Seeds  transverse  ; funicle  forming  short  slightly  thickened  folds  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Sandy  Cape,  Broadsound,  Northumberland  Islands,  R.  Brown;  Percy  Islands,  A. 
Cunningham ; sandstone  ridges  of  Kongili,  Leichhardt ; Mount  Wheeler,  Thozet. 

Wood  of  a brown  colour,  prettily  marked,  close-grained,  and  hard. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  1 Foods 
No.  138a. 

71.  A.  oraria  (coast  tree),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  xi.  66,  Ic.  viii.  1.  A scaly- 
hoary  small  tree  with  spreading  head  ; the  branches  towards  the  ends  acute- 
angular.  Phyllodia  1^  to  Sin.  long,  or  often  much  longer,  broad  and  falcate-oblong, 
3-nerved  with  reticulate  veinlets  between  them,  with  a basal  gland.  Flowers  in 
globular  heads  on  slender  peduncles,  solitary  or  several  in  each  of  the  upper  axils, 
sometimes  the  peduncles  bearing  secondary  peduncles  with  heads  of  flowers,  about 
30  flowers  in  a head.  Sepals  5,  free  or  connate,  hairy.  Petals  5,  not  keeled. 
Pod  3 to  5in.  long,  £ to  fin.  broad,  hard  transversely  and  reticulately  veined, 
curved,  sometimes  forming  a ring.  Seeds  longitudinal.  Funicle  twisted  and 
almost  encircling  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Near  the  beach,  Cairns,  Port  Denison,  and  Rockingham  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

Wood  close-grained,  the  outer  whitish,  inner  dark-brown,  and  nicely  marked. — Bailey’s  Cat. 
Ql.  Foods  No,  138- 


502 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS/E. 


r Acacia. 


72.  A.  Wickhami  (after  Capt.  Wickham),  Benth.  in  Hook.  howl.  Journ.  i. 
379,  and  FI.  A ustr.  ii.  392  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xi.  6.  A glabrous  shrub,  often  very 
glaucous  or  resinous  ; branchlets  angular-striate.  Phyllodia  numerous,  obliquely 
ovate  or  falcate-oblong,  obtuse  with  a small  oblique  glandular  point,  rarely 
exceeding  4in.,  coriaceous,  undulate,  with  several  nerves  all  very  faint  or  1 or  3 
more  prominent.  Spikes  pedunculate,  | to  | or  rarely  lin.  long,  densely  cylin- 
drical. Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  thin,  broadly  sinuate-toothed,  fully 
half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  united  below  the  middle,  the  midrib 
prominent.  Pod  flat,  but  thick  and  woody ; obliquely  veined,  about  2in.  long, 
2 lines  broad  above  the  middle,  gradually  tapering  at  the  base  and  recurved  at  the 
end.  Seeds  oblique,  oblong ; funicle  straight,  gradually  thickened  from  the  base 
into  a narrow-turbinate  aril,  not  at  all  folded. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria. 

The  more  or  less  prominent  nerves,  the  glaucous  hue,  or  resinous  exudations,  very  different  in 
parts  of  the  same  specimen.- — Benth. 

73.  A.  lysiphloea  (referring  to  the  flow  of  resin),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn. 
Soc.  iii.  137;  Benth.  FI.  Anstr.  ii.  393;  F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  x.  4.  “ Urr-tee,” 
Palmer  River,  Both.  A rigid  shrub  of  several  feet  or  small  tree,  glabrous  or 
nearly  so,  often  very  resinous.  Phyllodia  rather  crowded,  erect,  obliquely  linear- 
oblong,  linear  or  oblanceolate,  mostly  obtuse  but  with  a short  rigid  straight  or 
oblique  point,  narrowed  at  the  base,  4 to  lin.  long,  thick  and  rigid,  with  3 to  5 
obscure  or  more  or  less  prominent  nerves.  Spikes  pedunculate,  f to  lin.  long, 
slender  but  dense.  Flow’ers  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  very  short,  thin,  shortly 
united  at  the  base.  Petals  shortly  united,  the  midribs  prominent.  Pod  flat, 
oblique  or  falcate,  1 to  2in.  long,  J to  ^in.  broad,  hard  and  almost  woody, 
reticulate  and  resinous.  Seeds  ovate,  oblique  ; funicle  with  one  long  fold  and 
then  thickened  into  a small  aril  under  the  base  of  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  It.  Brown. 

Some  of  the  narrow-leaved  specimens  have  some  resemblance  to  A.  linarioides,  but  the  fruit  is 
very  different. — Benth. 

Twine  made  from  the  bark,  and  wood  used  for  making  spears. — Both. 

74.  A.  linarioides  (Linaria-like),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond.  .Journ.  i.  371,  and 
II.  Anstr.  ii.  393.  Glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent  and  viscid,  with  terete 
branchlets.  Phyllodia  rather  crow'ded,  linear,  obtuse,  with  a small  rigid  but  not 
pungent  point,  f to  lin.  long,  not  above  1 line  broad,  obscurely  1-nerved. 
Spikes  slender  but  rather  dense,  shortly  pedunculate  and  exceeding  the  phyllodia. 
Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  small,  thin,  free  or  slightly  connate  at  the 
base.  Petals  connate  to  the  middle,  with  thickened  tips.  Pod  linear,  slightly 
curved,  14-  line  broad  at  the  seeds  and  contracted  between  them,  the  valves 
convex,  rigid,  obscurely  striate,  with  thickened  nerve-like  margins.  Seeds  oblong, 
longitudinal  ; funicle  with  the  last  2 or  3 folds  thickened  into  an  irregularly  cup- 
shaped aril  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Cavern  Island,  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  B.  Broion. 

This  species  has  small  5-merous  dowers  and  nearly  the  phyllodia  of  A.  lysiphloea,  with  the  pod 
more  allied  to  that  of  A.  longifolia  and  its  allies,  but  more  rigid. — Benth. 

75.  A.  Chisholmi  (after  W.  R.  Chisholm),  Bail.  Ql.  Ayri.  Journ.  iv.,  part  1. 
Plant  very  resinous,  branches  slightly  pubescent,  and  more  or  less  corrugated. 
Phyllodia  linear,  about  lin.  long  and  scarcely  exceeding  J line  broad,  apiculate, 
often  somewhat  falcate,  slightly  hairy.  Spikes  erect,  rather  slender,  about  4 or  5 
lines  long,  upon  ‘a  slender  peduncle  of  an  equal  length.  Flowers  crowded, 
5-merous.  Sepals  small,  hyaline,  only  connate  near  the  base.  Petals  twice  as 
long  as  the  sepals,  free  almost  to  the  base,  colour  a deep-yellow.  Stamens 
numerous  ; filaments  flexuose,  slender.  Ovary  scaly,  style  flexuose,  exceeding 
the  stamens.  Pod  linear,  slightly  curved,  about  24in.  long  and  3 lines  broad, 


Acacia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOStE. 


508 


tapering  at  the  base  to  a stipes  of  8 lines,  margins  thick,  apex  obtuse,  veins 
anastomosing  longitudinally,  but  often  more  or  less  hidden  by  the  copious  flow  of 
resinous  gum.  Seeds  obliquely  transverse,  oval,  the  central  depression  rather 
deep,  nearly  annular  and  minutely  tubercular  ; funicle  with  2 or  3 folds,  thickened 
under  the  seed  into  an  irregular  cup-shaped  aril. 

Hab.:  Prairie,  Torrens  Creek,  Northern  Railway  Line,  IF.  Ii.  Chisholm. 

76.  A.  stipuligera  (stipules  prominent),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii. 
144;  Bcnth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  393;  F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xi.  3.  Softly  tomentose  or 
pubescent ; branchlets  nearly  terete.  Phyllodia  obliquely  falcate,  oblong  or 
lanceolate,  shortly  narrowed  at  each  end,  with  a small  callous  or  hooked  point, 
1 to  2in.  long,  8 to  7 lines  broad,  coriaceous,  with  2,  3,  or  4 very  prominent 
nerves  and  nerve-like  margins  and  numerous  anastomosing  more  or  less  longi- 
tudinal veins,  the  principal  nerves  often  scabrous  with  resinous  exudations. 
Stipules  brown,  small,  but  more  conspicuous  than  in  any  other  Juliflora  except 
A.cojispem i.  Spikes  nearly  sessile,  solitary  or  in  pairs,  1 to  nearly  2in.  long, 
dense  and  tomentose.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  half  as  long  as  the 
corolla,  thin,  with  spathulate  lobes,  readily  separating  into  distinct  sepals. 
Petals  united  to  the  middle,  tomentose.  Pod  long,  linear,  slightly  twisted,  not 
1J  line  broad,  coriaceous,  with  nerve-like  margins.  Seeds  very  obliquely 
placed  in  the  pod ; funicle  rather  long,  enlarging  and  closely  folding  upwards. 

Hab.:  Gulf  country. 

77.  A.  umbellata  (flowers  in  umbels),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond. 
Journ.  i.  378,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  394.  A tall  shrub,  young  shoots  slightly  hoary 
or  silky  but  soon  glabrous  ; branchlets  nearly  terete.  Phyllodia  from  oblong  and 
scarcely  falcate  to  obliquely  oblong-rhomboidal  or  broadly  falcate,  obtuse  with  a 
broadly  callous  or  glandular  tip,  2 to  4in.  long,  f to  1 Jin.  broad,  very  coriaceous, 
with  numerous  parallel  nerves  or  veins,  5 to  9 more  prominent  and  some  of  them 
confluent  with  the  lower  margin  at  the  base,  the  others  closely  packed,  fine  and 
rarely  anastomosing.  Spikes  sessile  or  nearly  so,  often  clustered,  rather  dense, 
1 to  1 Jin.  long.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous  but  sometimes  4-merous.  Calyx 
pubescent,  sinuate-toothed  or  shortly  lobed.  Petals  with  prominent  midribs. 
Pod  falcate  or  nearly  straight,  almost  terete,  with  convex  and  coriaceous  valves. 
Seeds  ovate,  oblique ; funicle  short,  dilated  into  a small  aril  of  2 or  3 folds 
under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 

78.  A.  brevifolia  (leaves  short),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  395.  Glabrous  and 
somewhat  glaucous,  with  angular  branchlets.  Phyllodia  obliquely  oblong,  some- 
what falcate,  very  obtuse  with  a small  callous  point,  narrowed  at  the  base,  1J  to 
2in.  long,  J to  fin.  broad,  very  coriaceous  with  several  prominent  nerves,  the 
intermediate  veins  irregularly  reticulate  or  longitudinal.  Spikes  short,  oblong- 
cylindrical,  pedunculate.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  short,  sinuate- 
toothed. Petals  smooth.  Pod  flat,  thick,  almost  woody,  with  oblique  veins  and 
thickened  margins,  very  obtuse,  ljin.  long,  nearly  4 lines  broad,  abruptly 
contracted  below  the  middle  into  a broad  stipes.  Seeds  oblique,  but  not  seen 
ripe. — A.  leptophleba  (referred  by  Benth.  to  A.  aulacocarpa),  var.  brevifolia,  F.  v.  M. 
in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  144. 

Hab  : Desert  of  the  Suttor,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

79.  A.  gonoclada  (branchlets  angled),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii. 
140  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  396  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xi.  2.  Glabrous  and  glaucous, 
branchlets  stout,  with  2 or  3 much  raised  acute  angles.  Phyllodia  lanceolate- 
oblong,  slightly  falcate,  obtuse  with  oblique  glandular  tips,  obliquely  narrowed 
towards  the  base,  3 to  4in.  long,  4 to  8 lines  broad,  coriaceous,  with  2 or  3 more 


Part  II. 


504 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS.E. 


[A  racia . 


prominent  nerves  almost  confluent  with  the  lower  edge  near  the  base,  and 
numerous  fine  parallel  veins  scarcely  anastomosing  and  not  very  closely  packed. 
Spikes  shortly  pedunculate, t oblong-cylindrical,  dense,  about  -4in.  long.  Flowers 
mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  shortly-toothed.  Petals 
distinct,  smooth,  without  prominent  midribs.  Pod  narrow-linear,  straight,  1 to 
14-in.  long,  14  line  broad,  thin  and  flat  with  nerve-like  margins.  Seeds  longi- 
tudinal ; funicle  dilated  and  once  folded  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Allied  in  some  respects  to  A.  Cun ning h amii. — Benth. 

80.  A.  longifolia  (long-leaved),  Willd.  Spec.  PI.  iv.  1052  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  397.  An  erect  shrub,  sometimes  low  and  bushy,  but  attaining  often  a con- 
siderable size  or  growing  into  a small  tree,  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent  when 
young ; branchlets  angular.  Phyllodia  from  broadly  oblong  to  oblong-lanceolate 
or  linear,  very  obtuse  or  almost  acuminate,  usually  narrowed  towards  the  base, 
with  2 to  5 more  or  less  prominent  longitudinal  nerves  and  conspicuously  or 
faintly  reticulate  between  them,  varying  in  length  from  2 to  Sin.  in  some  varieties, 
to  5 or  Gin.  in  others.  Spikes  axillary,  loose  and  interrupted,  flowers  not  imbri- 
cate, almost  always  4-merous.  Calyx  very  short,  toothed.  Petals  smooth,  united 
at  the  base  or  sometimes  quite  separating.  Pod  linear,  often  several  inches  long, 
2 to  4 lines  broad  or  rarely  more  ; valves  coriaceous,  convex  over  the  seeds, 
usually  contracted  between  them.  Seeds  longitudinal,  often  distant,  funicle  not 
much  folded,  thickened  almost  from  the  base  into  a turbinate  almost  cup-shaped 
aril  at  the  base  of  the  seed,  and  sometimes  nearly  as  large. — F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet, 
ii.  80;  Maid,  and  Camp.  FI.  PI.  N.S.W.,  No.  9. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  .-1 . Cunningham,  and  many  other  southern  localities. 

At  Toowoomba  called  Black  Wattle.  In  tanning  only  used  for  light  skins.  Staiger  found  the 
bark  to  contain  12-67%  of  tannin. 

Wood  towards  the  outside  yellow,  the  inner  brown,  streaked  with  black  ; tough  ; easy  to  work 
A good  cabinet  wood. — Hailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  139. 

Under  the  name  of  A.  longifolia,  I have  followed  F.  v.  Mueller  in  including  the  following 
forms,  which,  different  as  they  generally  appear,  are  connected  by  such  a gradual  chain  of 
intermediates  that  they  cannot  be  separated  by  any  positive  characters. — Benth. 

Yar.  Sophone,  F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  30.  Phyllodia  obovate-oblong,  very  obtuse,  coriaceous 
about  2 or  rarely  3in.  long,  h to  lin.  broad,  smaller  veins  reticulate.  Calyx  rather  larger  than  in 
the  other  varieties.  Pod  usually  much  curved  and  thick,  either  slender  and  narrow,  or  3 to  4 
lines  broad  and  very  thick. — Mimosa  Sophone,  Labill.  PI.  Nov.  Holl.  ii.  87,  t.  237  ; A.  Soph  one. 
R.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew  ed.  3,  v.  462;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  454;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1351  ; Hook.  f.  FI. 
Tasm.  i.  110. — Often  abundant  chiefly  on  the  seacoast,  Moreton  Bay.  Plate  in.  .1.  E Brown’s 
Forest  FI.  S.  Austr.  part  6. 

Yar.  typiea,  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  Phyllodia  linear-oblong  or  oblong-lanceolate,  mostly  obtuse, 
4 to  5in.  long,  coriaceous  but  often  less  so  than  in  the  last,  the  reticulate  veinlets  more  or  less 
elongated  and  parallel.  Pod  usually  long  and  slender.—  Mimosa  longifolia,  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t. 
207  ; Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  62  ; .1.  longifolia,  Willd.  Bot.  Reg.  t.  362;  Bot.  Mag.  t.  1827,  2166  ; 
Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  678. 

Var.  floribunda,  F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  31.  Phyllodia  linear  or  linear-lanceolate,  usually  nar- 
rowed at  each  end  or  acute,  3 to  5in.  long,  less  coriaceous  than  some  other  forms,  the  smaller 
veins  less  anastomosing  and  passing  into  long  parallel  veins  scarcely  finer  than  the  principal 
nerve. — A.  angustifolia,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  763. — About  Stanthorpe. 


81.  A.  linearis  (linear-leaved),  Sims,  Bot.  Mag.  L 2156  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  400.  An  erect  shrub  of  several  feet,  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent  when 
young  ; branchlets  angular.  Phyllodia  narrow-linear,  from  4,  5,  or  Gin.  long  to 
twice  that  length,  scarcely  above  1 line  broad,  yvith  a prominent  longitudinal 
nerve  and  occasionally  an  additional  faint  one  on  each  side.  Spikes  loose  and 
interrupted,  slender,  1 to  2in.  long,  quite  glabrous.  Flowers  mostly  4-merous. 
Calyx  very  short,  toothed.  Petals  smooth,  united  at  the  base.  Pod  linear, 
nearly  straight,  several  inches  long,  usually  about  2 lines  broad.  Seeds  longi- 


Acrid  a.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


505 


tudinal,  but  not  seen  perfect.^— DC.  Prod.  ii.  454  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  595  ; Hook, 
f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  109  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  31 ; A.  lonyissima , Wendl.  Comm.  Acac. 
45.  t.  11  ; Bot.  Reg.  t.  680. 

Hab.:  North  Coast  Bailway  Line,  near  Eumundi. 

Enumerated  by  F.  v.  Mueller  amongst  tbe  varieties  of  A.  longifolia,  and  certainly  very  near 
the  extreme  forms  of  the  var.  dissitiflora,  differing  chiefly  in  the  long  narrow  phyllodia,  either 
strictly  1-nerved  or  with  only  a faint  accessory  nerve  on  each  side. — Benth. 

82.  A.  cyperophylla  (sedge-leaved),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
400;  F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  x.  6.  Tall,  with  curly  bark  and  dark  wood,  branchlets  terete. 
Phyllodia  linear-subulate,  with  a fine  usually  curved  point,  6 to  lOin.  long,  terete 
or  very  slightly  compressed,  striate  with  numerous  exceedingly  fine  parallel  nerves 
only  visible  under  a lens,  hoary  with  a very  minute  loose  pubescence.  Spikes 
sessile  or  nearly  so,  oblong,  not  Jin.  long.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous  or  6-merous. 
Calyx  turbinate,  about  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  at  first  shortly  toothed  but 
often  dividing  nearly  to  the  base.  Petals  smooth,  glabrous.  Pod  straight,  very 
narrow,  about  8 Jin.  long.  Seeds  oval,  very  obliquely  placed  in  the  pod  ; funicle 
much  folded,  forming  an  aril  at  the  end. 

Hab.:  Southern  inland  localities. 

83.  A.  pityoides  (Pine-like),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  135  ; Bentli. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  400;  F.  v.  M.  1c.  Dec.  x.  7.  Quite  glabrous;  branchlets  slender, 
terete.  Phyllodia  linear-subulate,  rather  rigid  but  not  pungent,  2 to  4in.  long, 
slender,  terete  and  almost  nerveless,  or  slightly  flattened  and  striate  with  very 
fine  nerves,  scarcely  visible  without  a lens.  Spikes  usually  in  pairs,  pedunculate, 
about  Jin.  long,  slender  but  dense.  Flowers  small,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx 
very  thin  and  transparent,  deeply  lobed  or  the  sepals  quite  free  but  not  spathulate, 
fully  two-thirds  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  thin,  connate  to  the  middle,  with- 
out prominent  midribs.  Pod  elongated,  nearly  flat,  curved  or  twisted,  1 to  1J 
lines  broad,  slightly  contracted  between  the  seeds  ; valves  thinly  coriaceous.  Seeds 
obovate,  longitudinal ; funicle  straight,  enlarging  upwards. 

Hab.:  Ridges  of  the  Suttor,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

84.  A.  aneura  (wanting  nerves)  F.  v.  M.  in  Linncea,  xxvi.  627,  and  Fragm. 
iv.  8 ; Benth  FI.  Austr.  ii.  402  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  x.  8.  Mulga.  Shrub  or  tree,  often 
hoary  with  a very  minute  pubescence  ; branchlets  terete  or  nearly  so.  Phyllodia 
narrow-linear,  obtuse  or  with  a recurved  or  oblique  callous  point,  usually  flat  but 
thick,  1J  to  3in.  long,  1 to  1J  line  broad,  but  varying  from  short  and  narrow- 
oblong  to  very  narrow  and  almost  terete,  without  conspicuous  nerves,  but  finely 
and  obscurely  striate  under  a lens.  Spikes  shortly  pedunculate,  J to  fin.  long. 
Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  very  narrow,  linear-spathulate.  Petals 
smooth.  Pod  thin,  flat,  obliquely  oblong,  very  obtuse,  narrowed  at  the  base,  1 to 
ljin.  long,  about  4 lines  broad,  the  sutures  edged  with  a narrow  wing.  Seeds 
ovate,  oblique  or  transverse ; funicle  with  2 or  3 short  folds,  expanded  into  a 
small  membranous  aril  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Inland  localities. 

Foliage  largely  used  as  food  for  stock  in  times  of  drought. 

85.  A.  cibaria  (used  for  food)  F.  v.  M.,  Melb.  Chon.,  July  1882.  A tall 
shrub  or  small  tree  ; branchlets  not  angular,  slightly  silky.  Phyllodia  rather 
long,  thick,  rigid,  broadly  linear,  very  finely  many-nerved,  of  greyish  hue,  curved- 
apiculated ; stipules  and  gland  obliterated.  Spikes  axillary,  solitary,  short- 
stalked,  not  elongated.  Flowers  slightly  short-hairy.  Bracts  rhomboid  towards 
the  summit,  very  thin  towards  the  base,  surpassed  in  length  by  the  flowers. 
Sepals  narrow,  free,  hardly  half  as  long  as  the  unstreaked  corolla.  Pods  straight, 


506 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS7E. 


[ Acacia . 


cylindrical,  longitudinally  streaked.  Seeds  placed  lengthwise,  oblong,  their  two 
areoles  minute  ; strophiole  very  short,  cupular,  occupying  only  the  basal  portion 
of  the  seed  ; funicle  closely  twisted  beneath  the  strophiole. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  in  Mueller’s  2nd  Syst.  Cens.  Austr.  PI.  79. 

Baron  Mueller  says  that  in  foliage  this  species  resembles  A.  aneura,  but  differs  in  the  pods 
from  that  species.  He  also  says  that  the  seeds  are  used  for  food  by  the  natives. 

86.  A.  Kempeana  (after  Rev.  H.  Kempe)  F.  r.M.,  Mi’ll),  ( 'linn.  Druyy.,  July 

1882  ; 7c.  Dec.  x.  9.  A tree  with  faintly  angular  branchlets.  Phyllodia  oblong, 
more  or  less  tapering  at  the  base,  about  2in.  long  and  iin.  broad,  obtuse, 
8-nerved  and  nerve-like  margins,  closely  striate  between  the  nerves  ; stipules  and 
gland  obliterated.  Spikes  axillary,  generally  solitary  on  short  peduncles, 
together,  not  half  as  long  as  the  phyllodia.  Bracts  thin  rhomboid,  short. 

Flowers  glabrous,  three  times  as  long  as  the  bracts.  Calyx-teeth  short.  Corolla 
not  streaked,  three  times  the  length  of  the  calyx.  Pods  under  2in.  long  and  iin. 
broad,  flat,  oblong,  smooth,  stipitate.  Seeds  transverse  ; funicle  much  twisted 
and  ending  in  a large  fold  under  the  seed. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Warrego  and  Maranoa,  Barton  (F.  v.  M.) 

87.  A.  xylocarpa  (pod  woody),  A.  Gunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ. 
i.  370,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  401  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dee.  xi.  8.  A shrub  of  2 to  4ft., 
glabrous  and  slightly  viscid  ; branchlets  terete.  Phyllodia  linear-subulate,  not 
pointed,  2 to  4in.  long,  rather  rigid,  terete  or  rarely  flattened  to  nearly  1 line  in 
breadth,  obscurely  1 -nerved.  Spikes  mostly  in  pairs,  shortly  pedunculate,  slender 
but  closely  packed,  i to  fin.  long  when  fully  out.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous. 
Calyx  shortly  lohed,  about  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  united  to  the 
middle,  with  prominent  midribs.  Pod  nearly  terete  or  slightly  flattened,  1^  to 
Bin.  long,  shortly  acuminate,  3 to  4 lines  broad  and  thick  near  the  end,  gradually 
tapering  to  the  base  ; valves  hard,  almost  woody,  striate  lengthwise,  opening 
elastically  from  the  end  downwards.  Seeds  oblique  ; funicle  straight,  gradually 
and  slightly  thickened  from  the  base  upwards. — A.  orthocarpa,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ. 
Linn.  Soc.  iii.  136. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

Yar.  (?)  tenuisxima.  Phyllodia  longer  and  more  slender.  Spikes  short.  Pod  unknown. — A. 
temiimma,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  135.— Sturt’s  Creek,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

88  A.  gonocarpa  (pods  angled),  F.  r.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soe.  iii.  136  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  401  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  x.  9.  A shrub  of  4 or  5ft.,  young 
shoots  viscid,  with  slender  flattened  or  angular  branchlets,  at  length  terete. 
Phyllodia  very  narrow-linear,  but  flat,  with  a small  callous  or  hooked  point, 
mostly  H to  2 or  rarely  3in.  long,  prominently  1 -nerved.  Spikes  shortly  pedun- 
culate, solitary  or  in  pairs,  f to  +in.  long,  very  slender,  but  with  numerous 
closely  packed  very  small  flowers,  mostly  5-merous.  Sepals  very  narrow,  linear, 
thin  and  distinct.  Petals  thin,  cohering  to  the  middle.  Pod  hard  and  woody, 
1£  to  2in.  long,  about  3 lines  broad  ; valves  opening  elastically  from  the  ends 
downwards  as  in  A.  .vylocarpa,  but  with  raised  acute  longitudinal  angles.  Seeds 
not  seen,  the  pod  obliquely  partitioned  for  their  reception  as  in  A.  xylocarpa. 

Hab.:  Rocky  shores  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  M. 

89.  A.  drepanocarpa  (sickle-shaped  pod),  F.  r.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc. 
iii.  137  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  402  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xi.  10.  A glabrous  shrub, 
the  young  shoots  resinous ; branchlets  slender,  slightly  angular.  Phyllodia 
narrow-linear,  straight  or  slightly  curved,  obtuse,  narrowed  towards  the  base, 
2 to  4in.  long,  1 to  2 lines  broad,  with  a slightly  prominent  central  nerve  and 
1 or  2 finer  veins  on  each  side.  Spikes  slender,  not  very  dense,  4 to  fin. 
long,  shortly  pedunculate.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  thin,  with  narrow 


Acacia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS/E. 


507 


lobes,  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  connate  to  the  middle,  with  prominent 
midribs  as  in  A.  xijlocarpa.  Pod  erect,  linear,  to  3in.  long,  to  2 lines 
broad,  flat  but  thick,  with  much  raised  margins  and  obliquely  veined  between 
them,  the  almost  woody  valves  rolling  back  elastically  as  in  A.  rjonocarpa. 
Seeds  oblique ; funicle  straight,  gradually  thickened  from  the  base,  narrow- 
turbinate  and  cup-shaped  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Whitsunday  and  Palm  Islands,  Henne. 

90.  A.  conspersa  (scattered),  F.  c.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  140; 
Lenth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  403.  A shrub  of  5 to  10ft.,  with  loosely  pubescent 
branches  and  conspicuous  though  small  brown  stipules  as  in  A.  stipidigera. 
Phyllodia  narrow-lanceolate,  mostly  falcate,  narrowed  at  each  end,  obtuse  or  with 
a small  rigid  or  glandular  point,  2 to  3in.  long,  2 to  4 lines  broad,  coriaceous, 
often  minutely  mealy  or  slightly  pubescent,  with  a prominent  central  nerve  and 
often  2 less  prominent  lateral  ones,  and  numerous  very  fine  parallel  veins  between. 
Flowers  not  seen.  Pod  linear,  straight  or  slightly  falcate,  about  It  line  broad, 
thick  but  flat  till  ripe,  and  then  the  valves  slightly  convex  and  hard.  Seeds 
oblong,  longitudinal ; funicle  short,  the  last  2 folds  expanded  into  an  aril  under 
the  seed. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  B.  Brown. 

91.  A.  doratoxylon  (Spearwood),  A.  Cunn.  in  Field , N.  .S'.  Wales,  345  ; 
Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  403;  F.  v.  M.  lc.  Dec.  x.  1.  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree, 
glabrous  with  an  ashy  hue ; branchlets  at  first  acutely  angular,  but  soon  terete. 
Phyllodia  elongated,  slightly  falcate,  shortly  acuminate,  and  often  with  oblique  or 
recurved  points,  4 to  Sin.  long,  2,  3,  or  rarely  4 lines  broad,  narrowed  towards 
the  base,  rather  thick,  with  numerous  fine  parallel  nerves,  the  central  one  more 
prominent.  Spikes  shortly  pedunculate,  solitary  or  clustered,  rarely  lin.  long, 
rather  dense.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  sinuate-toothed,  not  half  as  long 
as  the  corolla.  Petals  with  slightly  prominent  midribs.  Pod  3 to  4in.  long,  very 
narrow,  tapering  much  at  the  point  and  slightly  constricted  between  the  seeds. 
Seeds  longitudinal ; funicle  twice  or  thrice  folded  and  forming  an  aril  at  the  base 
of  the  seed. 

Hab.:  On  the  Upper  Maranoa,  Mitchell ; Moreton  Bay,  C.  Moore. 

Wood  dark-brown,  with  a small  quantity  of  yellow  sapwood  ; close-grained,  very  hard,  and 
prettily  marked.  Recommended  for  buggy  poles. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  139c. 

92.  A.  delibrata  (sheds  its  bark),  A.  Cunn.;  Bentli.  in  Hook.  Bond.  Journ. 
i.  374,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  404;  F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xi.  i.  Branchlets  slender, 
slightly  angular,  silky-pubescent  when  young.  Phyllodia  linear-lanceolate, 
falcate,  narrowed  at  both  ends,  4 to  6in.  long,  2 to  5 lines  broad  in  the  middle, 
rather  thin,  sprinkled  with  loose  silky  hairs,  with  about  3 fine  but  prominent 
nerves,  and  finer  less  conspicuous  and  not  very  numerous  longitudinal  veins 
between  them,  occasionally  anastomosing.  Flowers  crowded,  in  dense  erect  spikes, 
on  short  peduncles,  5-merous.  Fruiting-spikes  with  a rhachis  of  1 to  liin.  Pod 
elongated,  straight,  flat  with  thickened  margins,  about  3 lines  broad,  the 
coriaceous  valves  rather  convex  over  the  seeds,  narrowed  between  them.  Seeds 
oval,  obliquely  placed  in  the  pod  on  a rather  long  straight  funicle. 

Hab.:  Gulf  country,  Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft. 

Pods  contain  a large  quantity  of  saponin. — Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft. 

93.  A.  torulosa  (twisted),  Bentli.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  139,  and 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  405 ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  x.  2.  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree, 
glabrous,  with  angular  branchlets.  Phyllodia  linear-lanceolate,  falcate,  with  an 
oblique  glandular  point,  narrowed  towards  the  base,  4 to  Bin.  long,  3 to  4 lines 
wide,  coriaceous,  with  3 to  5 prominent  nerves  and  numerous  very  fine  parallel 


508 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSJE. 


[ Acacia . 


ones  between  them.  Spikes  solitary  or  in  pairs  or  threes,  very  shortly  peduncu- 
late, 4 to  fin.  long,  slender  but  rather  dense.  Flowers  small,  mostly  5-merous. 
Sepals  narrow-linear,  spathulate,  ciliate,  free  or  slightly  united  at  the  base. 
Petals  united  to  the  middle.  Pod  long,  remarkably  moniliferous,  the  valves 
thickly  coriaceous,  convex,  oblong,  and  about  3 lines  broad  over  the  seeds,  much 
contracted  between  them.  Seeds  oblong,  longitudinal ; funicle  short,  the  last 
fold  expanded  into  a small  obliquely  cup-shaped  aril  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Dayman’s  Island,  Endeavour  Straits,  W.  Hill. 

Wood  dark-brown,  tough  and  strong. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  139d. 

Scarcely  to  be  distinguished  from  A.  julifera,  A.  plectocarpa,  and  some  others,  except  by  the 
fruit. — Benth. 

94.  A.  julifera  (flowers  in  spikes),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  i.  874, 
and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  405.  A tall  shrub  or  tree,  usually  glabrous  except  the  inflores- 
cence ; branchlets  slender,  angular  when  young,  but  soon  terete.  Phyllodia 
narrow-lanceolate,  falcate,  narrowed  at  both  ends,  4 to  6in.  long,  f to  4-in.  broad, 
coriaceous,  with  1 to  3 fine  nerves  and  the  nerve-like  margins  rather  more  pro- 
minent than  the  numerous  fine  veins  between  them.  Spikes  dense,  shortly 
pedunculate,  1 to  14in.  long,  solitary  or  two  or  three  together  on  a short  common 
peduncle.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  short,  more  or  less  lobed,  pubescent, 
woolly  or  rarely  almost  glabrous.  Pod  long,  1^  to  2 lines  broad,  spirally  twisted 
into  numerous  coils  either  loose  and  irregular  or  closely  packed  into  a short 
cylinder  ; valves  flat  or  slightly  convex.  Seeds  longitudinal  ; funicle  slightly 
thickened  from  the  base,  at  first  straight,  forming  2 or  3 more  dilated  folds  under 
the  seed. 

Hab.:  Cumberland  Islands,  If.  Brown;  Rodd’s  Bay,  A.  Cunningham;  Rockingham  Bay,  W. 
Hill;  Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallachy. 

Very  difficult,  without  the  pod,  to  distinguish  from  A.  doratoxylon  and  A.  plectocarpa. 
Phyllodia  more  falcate  than  in  the  former.  Branchlets  much  less  angular  than  in  the  latter. — 
Benth. 

95.  A.  Solandri  (after  Dr.  Solander),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  406.  A tall  shrub 
or  tree,  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  slightly  silky  ; branchlets  nearly  terete. 
Phyllodia  as  in  A.  julifera,  narrow-lanceolate,  falcate,  4 to  6in.  long,  3 to  4 lines 
broad,  with  1 to  3 slightly  prominent  and  numerous  very  fine  parallel  nerves. 
Spikes  2 to  3in.  long,  slender,  interrupted  and  glabrous  or  nearly  so.  Flowers 
distant  as  in  A.  linearis,  but  much  smaller  and  all  or  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx 
short  and  truncate.  Petals  smooth.  Pod  unknown. 

Hab.:  Bay  of  Inlets.  Banks  and  Solander  (Herb.  R.  Br.),  and  possibly  a form  with  woolly 
calyxes  from  the  head  of  Boyd  River,  Leichhardt,  the  specimens  imperfect.  I am  unable  to 
adopt  for  this  species  Solander’s  ms.  name  of  salicifolia,  as  there  already  exist  an  A.  saligna  and 
an  A.  salicina. — Benth. 


96.  A.  leptostachya  (slender  spikes  of  flowers),  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  406 ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  x.  3 Hoary  or  silvery  white  with  a very 
minute  pubescence  or  nearly  glabrous ; branchlets  slender,  slightly  angular. 
Phyllodia  linear  or  lanceolate  mostly  falcate,  narrowed  at  each  end  but  obtuse,  1 
to  2 or  rarely  3in.  long,  1 to  5 lines  broad,  straight  or  slightly  oblique  at  the  base, 
coriaceous  and  finely  striate  with  numerous  nerves  all  equal  or  2 or  3 rather  more 
prominent.  Spikes  mostly  in  pairs,  very  shortly  pedunculate,  slender,  f to  above 
lin.  long,  glabrous  or  nearly  so.  Flowers  usually  distant,  mostly  5-merous. 
Calyx  short,  truncate.  Petals  smooth,  united  at  the  base  only.  Pod  about  3in. 
long,  curved,  very  narrow.  Seeds  longitudinal.  Funicle  once  folded. 

Hab.:  Newcastle  Range,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Edgecombe  Heights,  Port  Denison,  Dallachy ; Port 
Denison,  Fitzalan ; Broadsound,  Herb.  F.  Mueller. 

Until  the  fruit  is  known  the  affinities  of  this  species  must  remain  uncertain.  F.  v.  Mueller 
considers  it  as  a form  of  A.  glaucescens,  but  the  phyllodia  are  quite  different,  and  the  specimens 
have  more  the  aspect  of  some  of  the  species  with  transverse  seeds. — Benth. 


Acacia.] 


ILIII.  LEGUMINOS/E. 


5o£ 


97.  A-  glaucescens  (bluish-grey),  Willrl.  Spec.  PI.  iv.  1052,  and  Hurt.  Berol. 
t.  101  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  406.  One  of  the  so-called  Rosewoods.  An  erect  tree 
attaining  60ft.  or  more,  bark  probably  the  thinnest  in  the  genus,  sometimes  not  over 
2 lines  thick  ; foliage  generally  ashy  or  hoary  with  a very  minute  close  pubescence 
or  the  young  shoots  yellowish  ; branchlets  more  slender  and  much  less  angular 
than  in  A.  Cunningharnii.  Phyllodia  oblong-falcate  or  lanceolate,  narrowed  at 
both  ends,  mostly  4 to  6in.  long,  J to  near  lin.  broad  in  the  middle,  coriaceous, 
striate  with  numerous  very  fine  nerves,  3 to  5 rather  more  prominent,  the  smaller 
ones  occasionally  anastomosing,  and  all  free  from  the  lower  margin  from  the 
base.  Spikes  nearly  sessile  or  shortly  pedunculate,  often  clustered  in  the  upper 
axils,  1 to  2in.  long.  Flowers  distinct  or  distant,  mostly  5-merous  but  occasionally 
4-merous.  Calyx  short,  truncate  or  sinuate-toothed,  pubescent  or  woolly.  Pod 
(if  correctly  matched)  linear,  much  twisted  or  irregularly  coiled  ; valves  hard, 
convex,  about  2 lines  broad.  Seeds  longitudinal. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  454  ; Mimosa 
binervis,  Wendl.  Bot.  Beob.  56,  quoted  in  Comm.  Acac.  53  ; A.  homomalla,  Wendl. 
Comm.  Acac.  49,  t.  13  (from  the  figure  and  description);  DC.  Prod.  ii.  454  ; A. 
cinerascens,  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  454  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  3174  ; A.  leucadendron,  A. 
Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  i.  374. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others  ; between  the 
Severn  and  Condamine  Rivers,  Leichhardt. 

Wood  with  a very  narrow  quantity  of  sapwood,  which  is  of  a light-yellow  colour,  the  rest  of 
the  wood  being  dark,  resembling  English  Walnut  and  Rosewood.  A valuable  wood  for  veneer  ; 
more  or  less  fragrant;  useful  in  turnery  and  cabinet-work. — Bailey’*  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  139a. 

98.  Ac  Maideni  (after  J.  H.  Maiden),  F.  v.  M.  Viet.  Nat.  1892.  Arbores- 
cent ; branchlets  somewhat  angular  towards  the  summit ; phyllodia  large,  of 
chartaceous  texture,  lanceolate-falcate,  gradually  narrowed  into  the  petiole,  very 
closely  striolated  by  fine  longitudinal  venules  with  some  few  of  these  more  pro- 
minent, almost  glabrous  or  slightly  greyish  from  hardly  visible  hairlets  ; marginal 
gland  near  the  anterior  base  of  the  phyllodia  inconspicuous  ; spikes  almost 
sessile,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together,  their  rhachis  tomentellous ; calyx  broader  than 
long,  much  shorter  than  the  corolla,  short-lobed,  slightly  pubescent ; corolla  almost 
glabrous,  deeply  cleft  into  usually  4 lobes,  not  streaked.  Pod  narrow,  consider- 
ably compressed,  much  twisted,  outside  beset  with  minute  hairlets ; seed  placed 
longitudinally,  ovate-ellipsoid,  shining-black,  their  areole  on  each  side  large ; 
funiele  pale-reddish,  completely  or  extensively  encircling  the  seed,  suddenly 
doubled  back  from  the  summit,  folded  at  the  lower  side. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 

99.  A.  Cunninghamii  (after  A.  Cunningham),  Hook.  lc.  PI.  t.  165,  not  of 

Bon,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  407.  “Tchilgar,”  Bundaberg,  Keys;  “ Kowarkull,” 
Stradbroke  Island,  Watkins.  A shrub  or  small  tree  of  10  to  20ft.,  glabrous  or 
hoary-pubescent ; branchlets  acutely  3-angled.  Phyllodia  falcate-oblong  or 
lanceolate,  narrowed  at  both  ends,  mostly  5 to  6in.  long  and  1 to  Hin.  broad,  or 
larger  on  barren  shoots,  with  numerous  parallel  veins,  3 to  5 more  prominent 
than  the  others,  and  1 or  2 confluent  with  the  lower  margin  near  the  very  oblique 
base.  Spikes  1J  to  3in.  long.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous,  often  distinct  or 
distant.  Calyx  short,  truncate  or  sinuate-toothed,  usually  glabrous.  Petals 

smooth.  Pod  long,  linear,  very  flexuose  or  twisted,  1 to  2 lines  broad ; valves 
coriaceous,  convex.  Seeds  longitudinal. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others;  sandy  forests 
near  Mount  Owen,  Mitchell. 

Drs.  T.  E.  Bancroft  and  Lauterer  have  found  the  unripe  pods  to  contain  saponin 

Gum  contains  10%  of  arabin  and  72  5%  of  motnrabin. — I.anterer. 

The  bark  yields  9-13%  of  tannin.  Staiger. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  close-grained,  hard  and  heavy,  prettily  marked.  Bailey's  Cat.  (,)!. 

I Foods  No.  140. 


510  XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E.  [ Acacia . 

Distinguished  from  A.  glauccscens  by  the  very  angular  branches,  the  larger  phyllodia  and  their 
venation. — Benth. 

Var.  longispicatu.  Branches  stout  and  still  more  angular.  Phyllodia  6 to  8in.  long,  1 to  2in. 
broad.  Spikes  3 to  4in.  long. — .-1.  longispicata,  Benth.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  298. — Near  Mount 
Pluto  and  Lake  Salvator,  Mitchell. 


100.  A.  leptocarpa  (slender  pods),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond.  Journ. 
i.  376,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  407.  Usually  glabrous  ; branchlets  at  first  slightly  angular, 
but  soon  terete.  Phyllodia  falcate-lanceolate,  narrowed  at  each  end,  4 to  Gin. 
long,  4 to  8 lines  broad,  with  3 or  more  fine  slightly  prominent  nerves  and  very 
fine  parallel  ones  between  them,  rarely  anastomosing,  and  not  nearly  so  close  as 
in  several  allied  species,  the  interval  between  each  several  times  the  breadth  of  the 
vein.  Spikes  1-J-  to  2in.  long,  solitary  or  in  pairs.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous, 
usually  glabrous,  not  very  close.  Calyx  short,  sinuate-toothed.  Petals  smooth, 
united  at  the  base.  Pod  linear,  straight  or  nearly  so,  several  inches  long,  1|  to 
2 lines  broad  ; valves  coriaceous,  convex  over  the  seeds,  contracted  between  them. 
Seeds  longitudinal ; funicle  with  the  last  2 or  3 folds  dilated  into  an  oblong  cup- 
shaped aril,  nearly  as  long  as  the  seed,  but  embracing  its  base  only. 

Hab.:  Cape  York,  II'.  Hill ; Endeavour  River  and  Cape  Flinders,  A.  Cunningham ; Shoalwater 
Bay,  R.  Brown ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan. 

Twine  made  from  the  bark. — Roth. 

Wood  dark-brown,  close-grained,  hard  and  prettily  marked  ; useful  in  turnery  and  cabinet- 
work.— Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  II Toods  No.  140b. 

101.  A.  polystachya  (spikes  numerous),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond. 
Journ.  i.  376,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  407.  Glabrous,  young  branches  angular,  but  soon 
terete.  Phyllodia  falcate-oblong  or  lanceolate,  narrowed  at  each  end,  6 to  lOin. 
long,  1 to  l^in.  broad,  very  oblique  at  the  base,  with  3 to  5 prominent  nerves, 
the  intermediate  ones  fine  and  numerous,  but  not  very  closely  packed  and 
occasionally  anastomosing.  Spikes  solitary  or  2 or  3 together,  slender,  glabrous, 
1 to  2in.  long.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous,  not  very  close.  Calyx  sinuate-toothed, 
not  half  so  long  as  the  corolla.  Petals  united  to  the  middle.  Pod  very  flexuose, 
but  not  spiral,  several  inches  long,  5 to  6 lines  broad  ; valves  fiat,  thinly  coria- 
ceous. Seeds  longitudinal  in  the  centre  of  the  pod  ; funicle  long,  dilated  and 
colored,  the  last  2 folds  more  than  half  encircling  the  seed,  the  next  2 extending 
along  the  other  side  so  as  nearly  to  surround  it. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brotvn : Port  Bowen,  A.  Cunningham ; Endeavour 
River,  IF.  Hill. 

Very  like  A.  leptocarpa,  but  phyllodia  usually  larger  and  the  pod  and  seed  different. — Benth. 

Wood  dark,  close-grained,  prettily  marked.  Bark  contains  7‘59%  of  tannin,  Staiger. — Bailey's 
Cat.  Ql  Woods  No.  140a. 

102.  A.  holcocarpa  (pods  grooved),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  408  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic. 
Dec.  xi.  5.  Glabrous;  branchlets  slender,  terete.  Phyllodia  broadly  falcate, 
narrowed  at  both  ends  and  very  oblique  at  tbe  base,  4 to  5 or  perhaps  6in.  long, 

1 to  Jin.  broad,  not  glaucous,  with  2 or  3 fine  rather  prominent  nerves  and  very 
numerous,  very  fine,  closely  packed  parallel  veins  between  them.  Spikes  nearly 
sessile,  about  lin.  long,  slender  but  dense.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous,  but  some- 
times 4-merous,  small.  Calyx  deeply  lobed,  pubescent.  Pod  long  and  slender, 
straight  or  slightly  curved,  nearly  terete,  longitudinally  sulcate-striate,  about 

2 lines  diameter.  Seeds  oblong,  longitudinal,  embedded  in  what  appears  to  be  a 
dried  pulp ; funicle  short,  scarcely  folded,  dilated  into  a short  more  or  less 
oblique  aril. 

Hab.:  Port  Bowen  and  Thirsty  Sound,  R.  Brotvn;  Trinity  Bay,  Hill;  Rockingham  Bay, 
Italia  chy . 

Phyllodia  precisely  like  those  of  A.  crassicarpa,  but  the  pod  very  different.— Herb.  R.  Brown 
(Benth.) 


Acacia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMlNOSiE. 


511 


108.  A.  plectocarpa  (pod  spur-like),  A.  Cunn.;  Bentli.  in  Hook.  Loud.  Journ. 
i.  375,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  408  ; F.  v.  M.  1c.  Dec.  x.  10.  Glabrous  and  often  some- 
what glaucous,  with  acutely  angular  branchlets.  Phyllodia  usually  falcate- 
lanceolate,  narrowed  at  both  ends,  4 to  6in.  long,  4 to  8 lines  broad,  resembling 
those  of  A.  julifera,  but  varying  from  2 or  3in.  long,  coriaceous  and  nearly 
straight  to  above  Gin.  long,  narrow-linear  and  thin,  about  3 nerves  fine  but  more 
or  less  prominent,  and  numerous  closely  packed  very  fine  parallel  veins  between 
them.  Spikes  slender,  not  very  dense,  about  lin.  long,  the  upper  ones  often 
forming  a terminal  leafy  panicle.  Flowers  small,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx 
short,  minutely  toothed.  Petals  smooth.  Pod  linear,  not  very  long,  usually  3 to 
4 lines  broad,  coriaceous,  at  first  flat,  with  straight  slightly  thickened  margins, 
but  becoming  often  very  much  undulate  between  them,  from  under  3 lines  broad 
and  quite  thin  to  broader  and  thick.  Seeds  ovate,  obliquely  transverse,  the  last 
2 or  3 folds  of  the  funicle  dilated  into  an  aril  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 

104.  A.  aulacocarpa  (grooved  pods),  A.  Cunn.:  Bentli.  in  Honk.  Bond. 
Journ.  i.  378,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  410;  F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  ix.  9.  “ Boorgun',”  Nanango, 
Shirley.  Slightly  hoary  or  ashy-glaucous  with  a minute  almost  powdery  down,  which 
at  length  disappears  ; branchlets  angular.  Phyllodia  falcate-lanceolate,  narrowed 
at  both  ends,  3 to  4in.  long,  about  fin.  broad,  with  a few  slightly  prominent 
nerves,  the  lower  ones  confluent  with  the  lower  margin  at  the  base,  and  numerous 
smaller  closely  packed  veins,  rarely  anastomosing.  Spikes  slender,  loose,  1 to 
2in.  long,  tomentose-pubescent  or  glabrous.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx 
with  short  broad  lobes.  Petals  united  below  the  middle.  Pod  falcate-oblong, 
flat  but  thick,  obtusely  recurved  at  the  end,  2 to  3fin.  long,  f to  fin.  broad,  much 
narrowed  at  the  base,  hard,  obliquely  veined.  Seeds  obliquely  transverse  ; 
funicle  twisted,  not  forming  an  aril  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Port  Bowen,  If  Brown,  A.  Cunningham;  Rockhampton,  DaUachy ; Cameron's  Brush, 
Leichhardt  ? 

Wood  hard,  heavy,  tough,  of  a dark  colour;  useful  in  cabinet-work. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods 
No.  141. 

Var.  (?)  macrocarpa.  Pods  3 to  5in.  long,  j to  lin.  broad,  much  undulate. — Keppel  Bay, 
Shoalwater  Bay,  and  Broadsound,  If.  Brown. 

105.  A.  calyculata  (flower  buds  small),  A.  Cunn.;  Bentli.  in  Hook.  Land. 
Journ.  i.  379,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  410.  Glabrous  or  ashy-glaucous;  branchlets 
very  flat  when  young,  with  acute  edges.  Phyllodia  falcate-obtuse,  narrowed 
at  the  base,  2 to  3in.  long,  about  fin.  broad,  rather  thick,  with  a few  slightly 
prominent  fine  nerves  and  numerous  very  fine  closely  packed  parallel  veins,  rarely 
anastomosing.  Spikes  mostly  clustered,  shortly  pedunculate,  slender,  f to  fin. 
long.  Flowers  very  small,  mostly  5-merous,  probably  white  (from  Solander’s 
ms.  name  A . albijlora j.  Calyx  short,  sinuate-toothed,  pubescent  or  villous.  Pod 
falcate-oblong,  obtuse,  narrowed  at  the  base,  flat  but  thick  and  hard  and  obliquely 
veined,  resembling  that  of  A.  aulacocarpa,  but  not  seen  ripe. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander ; Fitzroy  Island,  A.  Cunningham. 

Pod  of  A.  aulucocarpa,  with  shorter  and  more  obtuse  phyllodia,  and  the  branchlets  more 
flattened  than  in  any  other  Juliflorce  of  the  same  subseries.  The  pods  in  Cunningham’s 
herbarium  are  not  attached,  but  carefully  numbered  to  prevent  their  being  mismatched. — Benth. 

Wood  dark-brown,  hard  and  heavy ; close-grained.  Suitable  for  turnery  and  cabinet-work. — 
Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  141a. 

106.  A.  crassicarpa  (pods  thick),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook,  l^ond. 
Journ.  i.  379,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  410.  Lancewood  of  Cairns,  K.  Cowley ; 
“ Mon-jin,”  Butcher’s  Hill,  “ Ta-ra,”  Morehead  River,  Roth.  A handsome  tree 
of  30  to  40ft.  or  more,  glabrous  and  somewhat  glaucous  or  hoary  with  a minute 
powdery  pubescence.  Branchlets  scarcely  angular.  Phyllodia  falcate-oblong, 


512 


XL1II.  LEGtJMiNOSJE. 


[Acacia. 


narrowed  at  both  ends,  5 to  8in.  long,  1 to  2in.  broad,  very  oblique,  some  of  the 
principal  nerves  confluent  with  the  lower  margin  at  the  base,  and  numerous  fine 
parallel  veins  between  them,  very  rarely  or  not  at  all  anastomosing.  Spikes 
solitary  or  clustered,  slender,  not  very  dense,  lin.  long  or  rather  more.  Flowers 
mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  thin,  sinuate-toothed,  glabrous,  about  half  as  long  as 
the  corolla.  Petals  smooth  but  with  the  midrib  prominent  in  the  bud,  united  to 
the  middle.  Pod  oblong,  fiat,  thick,  hard,  obliquely  veined,  2 to  3in.  long,  f to 
nearly  lin.  broad,  obliquely  truncate  at  the  base,  occasionally  slightly  twisted. 
Seeds  oblique  ; funicle  not  seen. 

Hab.:  Goold  Island,  M‘Gillivray  ; Sweers  Island,  Henne ; Cairns,  E.  Cowley  ; Albany  Island, 
W.  Hill. 

Wood  prettily  marked,  hard,  and  dark-coloured.— Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  141a. 

107.  A.  auriculiformis  (ear-shaped),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond. 
Journ.  i.  377,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  411  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  ix.  10.  A small  tree, 
glabrous  and  glaucous,  with  slightly  angular  branchlets.  Phyllodia  falcate- 
oblong,  narrowed  at  both  ends,  5 to  8in.  long,  1 to  2in.  broad,  like  those  of 
A.  crassicarpa,  but  the  finer  veins  less  crowded  and  occasionally  anastomosing, 
the  principal  nerves,  as  in  that  species,  A.  polxjstachya  and  others,  confluent  with 
or  near  the  lower  margin  at  the  base.  Flowers  not  seen,  unless  some  of  the 
flowering  specimens  referred  to  A.  polystacliya  belong  to  this  species.  Pod  hard, 
almost  woody,  as  in  A.  crassicarpa,  but  very  much  twisted  in  an  irregular  spire, 
with  the  outer  edge  often  sinuate  as  in  some  Pithecolobiums : valves  obliquely 
veined,  6 to  8 lines  broad. 

Hab.:  Albany  Island,  W.  Hill.  F.  v.  Mueller. 

108.  A.  latifolia  (broad-leaved),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Land.  Journ.  i.  382,  and 

FI.  Austr.  ii.  411  ; F.  r.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  ix.  7.  “ Yoo-a-bal,”  Princess  Charlotte’s 

Bay,  Roth  Glabrous  and  glaucous ; branchlets  with  2 or  3 very  much  raised 
acute  or  almost  winged  angles.  Phyllodia  obliquely  ovate-rhomboid  or  falcate,  3 
to  Gin.  long,  1A  to  2in.  broad,  with  3 to  5 nerves  confluent  at  the  base  at  or  near 
the  lowrer  margin,  which  is  often  slightly  decurrent,  pinnately  net-veined  between 
them.  Spikes  pedunculate,  loose,  1 to  2in.  long.  Flowers  mostly  4-merous. 
Calyx  very  short,  broad,  truncate  or  obscurely  toothed.  Petals  smooth,  above  1 
line  long,  united  at  the  base  but  readily  separating.  Pod  shortly  stipitate,  linear, 
straight  or  curved,  2 to  4in.  long,  nearly  3 lines  broad,  flat  with  nerve-like 
margins,  but  not  seen  ripe.  Seeds  oblong,  longitudinal ; funicle  scarcely  folded, 
thickened  into  an  oblique  lateral  aril. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brawn;  Princess  Charlotte  Sound,  Dr.  W. 

E.  Roth.  Flowering  in  December. 

Fibre  obtained  from  bark  used  in  making  fishing  nets. — Roth. 

109.  A.  holosericea  (silky  in  all  parts),  A.  Cunn.  in  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst. 
ii.  407  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  411.  “War-roon,”  Cooktown,  Roth.  Hoary  or 
white  with  a close  silky  pubescence ; branchlets  with  3 much  raised  angles. 
Phyllodia  obliquely  oval-oblong,  obtuse  or  mucronate,  4 to  Gin.  long,  1 to  3in. 
broad,  or  the  lower  ones  much  larger,  with  3 or  4 prominent  nerves  confluent 
with  the  lower  margin  at  the  base,  and  pinnately  net-veined  between  them. 
Spikes  sessile,  often  2in.  long  or  more.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  small, 
shortly  lobed,  pubescent.  Petals  pubescent,  united  at  the  base.  Pod  long-linear, 
irregularly  or  spirally  twisted,  2 to  2-i-  lines  broad  ; valves  convex.  Seeds  ovate, 
longitudinal  ; funicle  folded  and  dilated  into  a cup-shaped  or  turbinate  aril  at  the 
base. — A.  neurocarpa,  A.  Cunn.  in  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  168. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown  ; Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solandcr ; 
Rockhampton  and  Port  Denison,  Thozet.  Dallachy,  and  others;  Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallachy. 

Wood  hard,  of  a whitish  colour. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  141c. 

Yar.  puhescem,  F.  v.  M.  Everywhere  softly  pubescent,  even  the  pod.— Victoria  River, 

F.  v.  Mueller. 


Acacia.  J 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


513 


110.  A.  Mangium  (an  old  generic  name),  Willd.  Spec.  iv.  1053.  Branches 
subtrigonal.  Stipules  almost  wanting.  Pkyllodia  ovate,  acute,  attenuated  at  the 
base,  longitudinal  nerve  parallel  to  the  lower  margin  of  the  phyllodium  and 
sending  out  oblique  nerves  on  the  upper  gide.  Peduncles  usually  solitary,  bearing 
a head  of  flowers.  Pod  falcate. — Mangium  rnontanum,  Rumpk.  Amb.  iii. 
123,  t.  81. 

Hab.:  Edgecombe  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

This  plant  is  very  imperfectly  known,  and  may  be  identical  with  A.  holosericea , A.  Cunn. 

111.  A.  cincinnata  (the  pods  curled),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  xi.  85';  Ic.  Dec. 
ix.  6.  Tree  or  shrub,  at  first  slightly  silky,  at  length  glabrescent,  the  branchlets 
becoming  quickly  somewhat  terete.  Phyllodia  4 to  6in.  long,  8 to  12  lines  broad, 
falcate-lanceolate,  chartaceous,  8-nerved,  venose-striolate  and  reticulate,  the 
nerves  confluent  with  the  lower  margin  at  the  base.  Spikes  axillary,  solitary  or 
in  pairs  on  short  peduncles  ; rhachis  slender,  silky-pubescent  ; flowers  distant. 
Bracts  shorter  than  the  calyx,  moderately  broad  and  acute.  Calyx  sericeo- 
pubescent,  almost  as  broad  as  long,  about  J line  high,  teeth  5,  deltoid.  Corolla 
5-lobed,  a little  exceeding  1 line  long,  glabrous.  Style  glabrous.  ' Pod  spirally 
curled,  2 to  3 lines  broad,  the  curl  about  lin.  long,  pruinose,  grey-blue  outside. 
Seeds  oval,  longitudinal,  about  2 lines  long ; funicle  yellow,  twice  encircling  and 
many  times  folded  at  the  base  of  the  seed. 

Hab.;  Rockingham  Bay  and  several  other  localities  in  tropical  Queensland. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  nicely  marked,  close-grained,  hard  and  tough,  of  a somewhat  greasy 
nature ; useful  for  cabinet-work,  turnery,  walking  sticks,  umbrella  handles,  &c.  Mr.  W. 
Macartney,  Forest  Hill,  Mackay,  states  that  this  timber  resists  the  attacks  of  the  teredo. — 
Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  141d. 

112.  A.  dimidiata  (halved,  shape  of  leaf),  Bentli.  in  Hook.  Loud.  Journ.  i.  381, 
and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  412.  Hoary  with  a minute  pubescence  or  nearly  glabrous  ; 
branchlets  scarcely  angular.  Phyllodia  broadly  and  obliquely  ovate-rhomboid, 
obliquely  truncate  at  the  base,  usually  3 to  4in.  long,  2 to  3in.  broad,  but  on 
some  barren  shoots  twice  or  three  times  that  size,  with  4 or  5 prominent  nerves 
more  or  less  confluent  with  the  lower  margin  at  the  base,  and  pinnately  net- 
veined  between  them.  Spikes  sessile  or  shortly  pedunculate,  usually  in  pairs,  1 
to  2in.  long.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  angular,  lobed,  readily  separating 
into  distinct  sepals.  Petals  united  below  the  middle.  Pod  linear,  nearly  straight, 
2 to  6in.  long,  2 to  3 lines  broad  ; valves  coriaceous,  very  convex.  Seeds  longi- 
tudinal, ovoid-oblong  ; funicle  short,  thickened  into  a turbinate  or  obliquely  cup- 
shaped aril  at  the  base  of  the  seed.— A.  dolabriformis,  A.  Cunn.  in  Hook.  Ic.  PI. 
t.  169,  not  of  Wendl. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 

113.  A.  humifusa  (dwarf  habit  of  plant),  A.  Cunn.;  Bentli.  in  Hook.  Bond. 
Journ  i.  382,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  412.  Diffuse  or  prostrate,  softly  pubescent  or 
tomentose  ; branchlets  nearly  terete.  Phyllodia  broadly  and  obliquely  ovate- 
rhomboid  or  almost  orbicular,  l\  to  2in.  long  and  nearly  as  broad,  or  in  luxuriant 
shoots  nearly  twice  that  size,  often  undulate,  with  3 to  5 nerves  more  or  less 
confluent  with  the  lower  margin  at  the  base,  and  pinnately  reticulate  between 
them.  Spikes  sessile,  oblong,  dense,  scarcely  exceeding  |fn.  Flowers  mostly 
5-merous.  Calyx  deeply  lobed,  pubescent.  Petals  densely  pubescent,  united  at 
the  base.  Pod  linear,  nearly  straight,  thick,  and  nearly  terete,  1-|  to  3in.  long, 
2£  to  3 lines  broad,  coriaceous,  pubescent.  Seeds  oblong,  longitudinal  ; funicle 
with  the  last  1 or  2 folds  thickened  into  an  obliquely  cup-shaped  aril  at  the  base 
of  the  seed. 

Hab.;  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown  : Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander  : 
Cape  Cleveland,  A.  Cunmnyham  : Lizard  Island,  M‘ G-illivray  ; Albany  Island,  W.Hill:  Somerset. 


514 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[ Acacia . 


114.  A.  spectabilis  (good-looking),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Loud.  Journ. 

i.  383,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  413.  A tall  shrub,  glabrous  and  glaucous,  or  the 
branchlets  and  petioles  shortly  hirsute.  Pinna?  2 to  4 pairs  ; leaflets  4 to  8 pairs, 
obovate-oblong,  very  obtuse,  4 to  6 lines  long,  rather  thick  and  obscurely  veined  ; 
gland  depressed  at  the  lowest  pair  of  pinna?,  often  very  obscure.  Flower-heads 
in  axillary  racemes  longer  than  the  leaves,  the  upper  ones  often  paniculate. 
Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  short,  obtusely  toothed.  Petals  united  at  the 
base  only.  Pod  3 to  4in.  long,  about  ^in.  broad,  glaucous. — Bot.  Reg.  1843,  t. 
46;  A.  chrysobotrys,  Meissn.  Ind.  Sem.  Hort.  Basil.  1842,  from  the  character  in 
Walp.  Rep.  ii.  906. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  A.  Gunninyham ; between  the  Severn  and  Condamine  Rivers,  Leich- 
hardt; forest  near  Harvey’s  Range  and  Maranoa  River,  Mitchell.  Flowering  in  August. 

Var.  (?)  Stuartii.  Leaflets  10  to  15  pairs  and  rather  narrower,  but  glands  as  in  A.  spectabilis. 
— Towards  the  Macintyre. 

115.  A.  polybotrya  (flowers  on  many  branches),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Bond. 
Journ.  i.  384,  aiu!  FI.  Austr.  ii.  14  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xii.  6.  A tall  shrub,  the 
foliage  more  or  less  pubescent.  Pinna?  usually  2 or  3 pairs;  leaflets  6 to  10  pairs, 
narrow-oblong,  obtuse,  3 to  4 lines  long,  rather  thick  with  a prominent  nerve 
near  the  lower  edge,  the  rhachis  terminating  in  a recurved  deciduous  point ; a 
gland  at  the  base  of  the  petiole,  those  between  the  leaflets  rare  and  minute. 
Flower-heads  numerous,  small,  in  racemes  much  exceeding  the  leaves,  the  upper 
ones  forming  a terminal  panicle.  Flowers  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  short, 
obtusely  lobed.  Petals  united  at  the  base.  Pod  about  3^in.  long,  constricted 
between  the  seeds.  Seeds  longitudinal;  funicle  not  folded. 

Hab.:  Burnett  River,  F.  v.  Mueller;  S.  part  of  the  colony,  Bowman;  limestone  hills, 
Leichhardt;  Ipswich,  Nernst.  Flowering  in  August. 

Wood  pinkish,  close-grained,  hard,  and  beautifully  marked ; would  be  a valuable  cabinet 
wood. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No  142. 

Var.  foliolosa.  Softly  pubescent.  Pinnse  4 to  6 pairs,  2 to  3in.  long;  leaflets  15  to  25  pairs,  3 
to  6 lines  long  and  less  obtuse. 

116.  A.  discolor  (two-colored),  Willd.  Spec.  PI.  iv.  1068;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 

ii.  414.  A tall  shrub  or  tree,  branchlets  terete  or  angular,  glabrous  or  pubescent. 
Pinnce  2 to  6 pairs,  leaflets  10  to  15  pairs,  oblong,  obtuse  or  acute,  3 to  4 lines 
long,  rather  firm,  1-nerved,  glabrous,  pale  underneath  ; gland  usually  large  on 
the  petiole  and  a few  small  ones  at  the  upper  pairs  of  leaflets.  Flower-heads  in 
axillary  racemes,  the  upper  racemes  forming  a terminal  panicle ; flowers  6 to  15 
in  the  head,  rather  large,  5-merous.  Calyx  short,  broadly  lobed,  ciliate.  Petals 
rather  rigid,  with  prominent  midribs,  striate  in  the  bud.  Pod  1 to  3in.  long,  5 to 
6 lines  broad.  Seeds  longitudinal ; funicle  filiform. — Mimosa  discolor,  Andr.  Bot. 
Rep.  t.  235  ; M.  paniculata,  Wendl.  Bot.  Beob.  57  ; M.  botrycephala,  Vent.  Hort. 
Cels.  t.  1 ; Acacia  botrycephala,  Desf.  Cat.  Hort.  Par.  ed.  3300 ; A.  discolor, 
DC.  Prod.  ii.  468  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  1750  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  601  ; Hook.  f.  FI. 
Tasm.  i.  Ill  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  ii.  34;  A.  maritima,  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond. 
Journ.  i.  384  (with  more  glabrous  and  angular  branchlets)  ; A.  Sieberiana, 
Scheele  in  Linmea,  xvii.  337. 

Hab.:  Near  Stanthorpe. 

117.  A.  decurrens  (petioles  decurrent  upon  the  branches),  Willd.  Spec.  PL 
iv.  1072  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  414.  Green  Wattle.  “ Gnjumgahn,”  Nanango, 
Shirley.  A handsome  tree,  glabrous  or  more  or  less  tomentose-pubescent ; 
branches  more  or  less  prominently  angled,  sometimes  almost  winged.  Pinnae  8 
to  15  pairs  or  sometimes  even  more,  rarely  reduced  to  5 or  6,  leaflets  very 
numerous  (30  to  40  pairs  or  even  more),  linear,  from  under  2 lines  to  nearly  5 
lines  long,  according  to  the  variety.  Flower-heads  small,  globular  in  axillary 
racemes,  the  upper  ones  forming  a terminal  panicle.  1 lowers  20  to  o0  m the 


Acacia.  1 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


515 


head,  mostly  5-merous.-  Calyx  short,  broadly  lobed,  ciliate.  Petals  with  slightly 
prominent  midribs.  Pod  usually  8 to  4in.  long,  about  £in.  broad  or  rather  more, 
more  or  less  contracted  between  the  seeds.  Seeds  ovate. — F.  v.  M.  PI.  Yict. 
ii.  85  ; Maid,  and  Camp.  FI.  PI.  N.S.W.,  No.  13. 

Hab.:  Plains  of  the  Condamine,  Leichhardt. 

Gum  contains  18  6%  of  arabin  and  62%  of  metarabin. — Lauterer.  The  bark  contains  15'08% 
of  tannin. — Staiger. 

Wood  tough,  firm,  and  easily  worked ; sapwood  white,  heartwood  pinkish.  Useful  for  tool- 
handles,  staves,  <fec. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  1 Voods  No.  142a. 

a.  normalis.  Glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  slightly  tomentose-pubescent.  Leaflets  long  and 
narrow,  usually  3 to  4 lines ; glands  numerous  along  the  primary  rhachis. — Mimosa  decurrens, 
Wendl.  Bot.  Beob.  57 ; Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  61 ; A.  decurrens , DC.  Prod.  ii.  470  ; A.  angulata, 
Desv.  Journ.  Bot.  1814,  ii.  68  ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  468;  A.  sulcipes,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.;  A.  adenophora, 
Spreng.  Syst.  iii.  140. — Bentli. 

b.  mollis,  Lindl.  Bot.  Beg.  t.  371.  Foliage  softly  tomentose-pubescent,  the  indumentum 
assuming  a golden-yellow  tinge  on  the  young  shoots.  Leaflets  2 to  3 lines  long,  obtuse  ; glands 
numerous  along  the  primary  rhachis. — A.  mollissima,  Willd.  Enum.  1053;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  470; 
Sweet,  FI.  Austr.  t.  12  ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  117.  Some  of  Beckler’s  specimens  from  Warwick 
have  the  numerous  glands  of  this  form  with  the  very  small  leaflets  of  the  following. — Benth. 

c.  paitciglandulosa,  F.  v.  M.  Pubescent  but  not  so  softly  so  as  in  the  var.  mollis,  and  some- 
times almost  hirsute,  with  the  same  golden-yellow  tinge  on  the  young  shoots.  . Leaflets  small, 
often  under  2 lines  ; glands  few,  often  only  under  the  last  1 or  2 pairs  of  pinna;. — Moreton  Bay, 
&c.;  also  between  Archer’s  and  M'Kenzie’s  stations  in  moist  places,  Leichhardt. — Benth.  Wood 
of  a pinkish  colour,  close-grained,  and  nicely  marked. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  142b. 

118.  A.  dealbata  (white-powdered),  Link.  Enum.  Hart.  Berol.  445  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  415.  A handsome  tree,  closely  resembling  the  var.  mollis  of  A. 
decurrens,  and  to  be  added  perhaps  to  the  varieties  of  that  species  as  proposed  by 
F.  v.  Mueller,  but  the  branches  and  foliage  are  very  glaucous  or  hoary  with  a 
minute  pubescence  not  assuming  a golden  tinge  on  the  young  shoots.  Pinnae 
usually  10  to  20  pairs,  leaflets  30  to  40  pairs,  linear,  crowded,  2 to  3 lines  long  ; 
glands  usually  numerous.  Flower-heads  small,  in  axillary  racemes  paniculate  at 
the  ends  of  branches,  as  in  A.  decurrens.  Pod  broader,  not  contracted  between 
the  seeds  and  more  glaucous. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  470;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1928; 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  Ill  ; A.  irrorata,  Sieb.  in  Spreng.  Syst.  iii.  141. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  species  by  F.  v.  M.,  who  probably  received  specimens  from  the 
Stanthorpe  district. 

This,  the  Silver  Wattle  of  the  southern  colonies,  is  unhesitatingly  united  with  A.  decurrens  by 
F.  v.  Mueller ; .1.  D.  Hooker  considers  it  as  sufficiently  distinct,  although  not  easy  to  characterise 
from  dried  specimens.  The  shape  of  the  pod  is  different  as  far  as  known,  but  the  specimens  of 
the  several  forms  of  A.  decurrens,  from  many  stations,  are  in  flower  only. — Benth. 

Exudes  a gum  which  is  the  best  substitute  for  arabie  gum  available  from  Queensland  native 
trees.  It  contains  81%  of  arabin. — Lauterer. 

119.  A.  Arundelliana  (after  E.  H.  Arundell),  Bail.  A tall  graceful  shrub  or 
small  tree,  the  branches  often  drooping,  all  the  young  growdh  bristly  with  brown 
spreading  hairs.  Leaves  oblong  in  outline,  about  3in.  long  and  liin.  broad,  on 
very  short  petioles.  Pinnae  about  18  pairs,  lin.  long  ; leaflets  scarcely  exceeding 
1 line  .long,  very  narrow,  about  30  pairs.  Flowers  in  small  globular  heads  on 
filiform  peduncles,  in  slender  racemes,  5 or  Gin.  long.  Calyx  and  petals  rather 
thick,  mostly  5-merous.  Pod  5in.  long,  ^in.  broad,  scarcely  contracted  between 
the  seeds  ; funicle  expanding  into  an  aril  under  the  seeds. — -A.  decurrens  var.? 
Leichhardtii,  Benth.  in  Flora  Austr.  ii.  414. 

Hab.:  Bordering  the  North  Coast  Eailway  about  Maroochie  and  Eumundi. 

Given  as  a doubtful  variety  of  A.  decurrens  in  the  Flora  Austr. — A.  d.  (?)  Leichhardtii,  under 
which  name  it  could  not  be  kept  as  a species,  there  being  one  so  designated. 

Wood  of  a light  colour  near  the  outside,  pinkish  towards  the  centre,  prettily  marked  and  close- 
grained. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods.  No.  143. 

120.  A.  leptoclada  (slender  branches),  A.  Cunn.;  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond. 
Journ.  i.  385,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  416.  A shrub,  either  glabrous  and  somewhat 
glaucous  or  hispid  with  scattered  short  stiff  hairs.  Pinnte  3 to  5 pairs,  3 to  4 


51G 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOS^E. 


[Acacia . 


lines  long,  on  a common  petiole  of  } to  £in.  ending  in  a -recurved  point ; leaflets 
6 to  10  pairs,  oblong,  coriaceous,  i to  1|  line  long;  glands  several,  usually 
small.  Flower-heads  small,  hispid,  with  long  bristly  hairs  proceeding  from  the 
bracts  and  sepals,  in  racemes  longer  than  the  leaves.  Flowers  numerous, 
closely  packed,  the  corolla  not  protruding  in  the  bud,  apparently  ready  to  open, 
but  not  seen  fully  out.  Sepals  distinct,  linear-spathulate  with  concave  tips. 
Petals  also  free  in  the  bud.  Pod  unknown. 

Hab.:  E.  coast,  It.  Brown. 

121.  A.  farnesiana  (the  Farnesian  Acacia),  Willd.  Sp.  PI.  iv.  1083  ; Benth. 

FI.  Austr.  ii.  419.  “ Bunkerman,”  Cloncurry,  Palmer.  A much-branched  shrub, 

attaining  considerable  size,  quite  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent  on  the  petioles 
and  peduncles.  Pinna1  4 to  6 or  rarely  more  pairs  ; leaflets  usually  10  to  20 
pairs,  linear,  about  2 lines  long  or  on  luxuriant  shoots  often  much  longer. 
Stipules  converted  into  slender  straight  thorns,  very  variable  in  length, 
occasionally  fin.  long,  and  sometimes  all  very  minute  or  almost  none,  the  plant 
otherwise  unarmed.  Peduncles  usually  2 or  8 together  in  the  older  axils,  each 
bearing  a globular  head  of  numerous  5-merous  flowers.  Bracts  small,  close 
under  the  flower-head.  Calyx  above  half  as  long  as  the  corolla.  Pod  thick, 
irregularly  cylindrical  or  spindle-shaped,  2 to  Bin.  long,  indehiscent,  filled  with  a 
pithy  substance  in  the  midst  of  which  lie  the  seeds.  Seeds  obliquely  transverse, 
with  short  funicles. — DC.  Prod.  ii.  461  ; Vacliellia  farnesiana,  W.  and  Arn.  Prod. 
272,  with  the  synonymy  adduced;  Wight,  Ic.  t.  300;  A.  lenticellata , F.  v.  M.  in 
Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  147. 

Hab.:  Darling  Downs  ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan  ; in  the  interior,  Mitchell. 

The  species  is  very  common  in  tropical  countries  in  the  New  and  the  Old  World,  much  planted 
for  ornament  or  for  the  perfume  extracted  from  its  flowers,  and  readily  spreading.  Believed  by 
some  to  be  of  American  origin,  by  others  to  be  truly  indigenous  also  in  Africa  and  Asia,  and  has 
every  appearance  of  being  so  in  Australia. — Bentli. 

Boasted  pods  eaten,  Cloncurry. — Palmer. 

The  Queensland  plant  seems  of  a more  slender  growth  than  that  cultivated  in  gardens.  I find 
no  other  difference. 

122.  A.  Bidwilli  (after  J.  C.  Bidwill),  Benth.  in  Linn  am,  xxvi.  629,  and  FI. 

Austr.  ii.  420;  F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xii.  4.  “ Yadthor,”  Cloncurry,  Palmer; 

“ Waneu,”  Rockhampton,  Thozet.  Glabrous ; branches  mostly  terete.  Pinnae 
15  to  20  pairs,  the  common  petiole  2 to  Sin.,  the  partial  rhachis  A to  lin.  long  ; 
leaflets  15  to  25  pairs,  oblong,  obtuse,  rigid,  scarcely  1 line  long.  Stipules 
spinescent  and  sometimes  2 to  3 lines  long,  usually  very  small  or  quite  obsolete. 
Peduncles  solitary,  with  an  annular  deciduous  4-lobed  bract  about  the  middle, 
bearing  a globular  head  of  about  20  or  rather  more  4-merous  flowers  and  some- 
times 1 or  2 lower  down  the  peduncle,  each  flower  often  2 lines  long.  Calyx 
shortly  toothed.  Petals  smooth,  united  above  the  middle.  Pod  straight,  3 to 
6in.  long,  about  Ain.  broad,  narrowed  at  the  base ; valves  coriaceous,  somewhat 
convex,  reticulate  lengthwise.  Seeds  large,  ovate,  longitudinal ; funicle  slightly 
thickened  from  the  base  upwards,  very  shortly  inflexed  or  folded  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill;  Bockhampton,  Dallachy  ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan. 

Var.  (?)  major.  Leaflets  sometimes  2 lines  long.  Seeds  broader.  Flowers  unknown. — Bidges  of 
the  Victoria  Biver,  F.  v.  Mueller.  To  this  belong  the  fruiting  specimens  referred  to  A.  pallida, 
F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  147. 

The  flowers  of  this  species  have  at  first  sight  some  resemblance  to  those  of  some  Albizzias,  but 
the  stamens  are  quite  free,  although  inserted  on  a small  prominent  disk  under  the  ovary,  not 
united  in  a tube  round  the  ovary,  as  in  all  the  Inga-flowered  genera.—  Benth. 

Wood  light-yellow  near  the  outside,  the  inner  wood  dark,  close-grained,  light,  and  easily 
worked. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  145. 

Boots  of  young  trees  roasted  for  food  after  peeling. — Palmer  and  Thozet.  l.c. 


Arana . 1 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


517 


128.  A.  Sutherlandi  (after  J.  Sutherland),  F.  r.  M.,  Tc.  Dec.  xii.  8. 
(. Albizzia  Sutherlandi,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  vi.  22,  ix.  179  ; Acacia  melaleucoides, 
Bail.,  Proc.  Roy.  Soc.  Ql.  v.  121.)  A small  tree,  the  bark  on  the  trunk  much 
cracked  and  of  a dark  colour,  the  branches  drooping,  branchlets  more  or  less 
angular  and  corky,  young  growth  said  to  be  of  a decided  golden  hue.  Leaves 
slender,  6 to  over  12in.  long,  of  from  15  to  over  20  pairs  of  pinnae  2 to  3in.  long; 
common  petiole  2 to  3in.  long ; leaflets  linear,  2 to  2J  lines  long  and  about  \ line 
broad  ; glands  dark,  between  the  3 upper  pairs  of  pinnae  only.  Stipules  none  on 
the  specimens  examined.  Peduncles  solitary,  about  lin.  long,  bearing  a stem- 
clasping  2-lobed  bract  about  the  middle.  Spike  about  liin.  long.  Flowers 
numerous  but  not  crowded,  pale-coloured,  bracts  subtending  the  flowers  very 
deciduous,  narrow.  Calyx-tube  nearly  2 lines  long,  teeth  3,  rather  broad  and 
silky.  Corolla-tube  about  2 lines  long,  teeth  5,  about  i-  line  long,  narrow  silky. 
Stamens  numerous,  exserted  about  3 lines  ; anther  minute,  globular.  Pod  very 
thick,  4 to  Gin.  long,  fin.  wide,  sessile.  Seeds  thick,  oval,  about  5 lines  long. 

Hab.:  Southern  slope  of  Newcastle  Range,  between  Georgetown  and  Junction  Creek. — 
It.  C.  Burton. 

It  was  after  publishing  this  plant  as  Acacia  melaleucoides  that  I found  that  Baron  Mueller  had 
published  it  some  years  previously  as  Albizzia  Sutherlandi;  he,  however,  removed  it  into  the 
genus  Acacia  about  the  time  my  name  was  published.  I think,  however,  under  the  circumstances 
his  name  should  stand. 


93.  ALBIZZIA,  Durazz. 

(After  the  noble  family  of  Albizzi.) 

Calyx  campanulate  or  tubular,  5 or  rarely  4-toothed.  Corolla  5 or  rarely 
4-lobed,  with  a cylindrical  tube.  Stamens  indefinite,  usually  numerous  and  long, 
united  at  the  base  in  a tube  enclosing  the  ovary.  Pod  linear  or  oblong,  straight 
or  nearly  so,  flat,  thin,  rarely  coriaceous,  indehiscent  or  opening  without  elasticity 
in  2 valves.  Seeds  usually  orbicular,  along  the  centre  of  the  pod  ; funicle  fili- 
form.— Trees  or  shrubs,  without  prickles.  Leaves  twice  pinnate,  with  a gland  on 
the  petiole  below  the  pinnfe  and  others  between  or  below  some  or  all  of  the  pinna? 
and  leaflets.  Flowers  in  globular  heads  or  rarely  cylindrical  spikes,  usually 
hermaphrodite.  Stamens  white  or  pink,  rarely  yellow,  much  longer  than  in 
Acacia. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  the  Old  World,  and  is  chiefly  tropical.  Of  the  following  species,  one  is 
widely  dispersed  over  tropical  Asia,  the  others  are  endemic.  F.  v.  Mueller  proposes  to  reunite  this 
and  Pithecolobium  with  Acacia,  but  that  can  scarcely  be  done  without  returning  to  the  Linnsean 
genus  Mimosa,  for  Pithecolobium  as  to  flower  and  fruit,  and  Albizzia  as  to  flowers,  are  undis- 
tinguishable  from  Inga,  whilst  Lysiloma  as  closely  connects  Acacia  with  Mimosa.  If  the  Linnsean 
Mimosa  is  broken  up  into  distinct  genera,  there  is  no  character  so  constant  and  so  easily  recog- 
nised as  that  which  separates  Acacia  from  Albizzia.  It  is,  however,  very  difficult  to  draw  a 
definite  line  between  Albizzia  and  Pithecolobium,  which  only  differ  in  the  fruit. — Bentli. 


Pinnae  numerous.  Leaflets  very  numerous.  Pod  about  Oin.  long,  lin.  broad  1.  A.  Toona. 
Flowers  in  globular  heads  on  axillary  peduncles. 

Leaflets  o to  10  pairs,  2 to  3 lines  long 2.  A.  basaltica. 

Leaflets  2 to  4 pairs,  J to  lin.  long 3 .A.  Thozetiana. 

Flowers  in  small  heads  in  large  terminal  panicles. 

Panicle  loose.  Stamens  about  Jin.  long.  Pod  under  lin.  broad  ....  4.  A.  procera. 

Flower-heads  very  numerous  and  crowded.  Stamens  about  Jin.  long.  Pod 

1J  to  above  2in.  broad 5 .A.  canescens. 


A.  Lebbeck,  Benth.,  allied  to  A.  canescens,  but  more  glabrous,  with  much  larger  flowers,  not 
closely  sessile,  and  the  pod  not  so  broad,  &c.,  a tree  widely  dispersed  over  tropical  Asia  and 
Africa,  has  been  introduced  into  the  neighbourhood  of  Brisbane. — Benth.  Planted  near  settle- 
ments, but  cannot  be  said  to  be  naturalised. 

1.  A.  Toona  (wood  like  the  Red  Cedar,  Ceilrella  Toona),  Bail.  1st  Snppl.  Syn. 
Ql.  Flora.  Mackay  or  Acacia  Cedar.  “ Carabbe,”  Cairns,  Nnyent.  A tall  tree 
with  stem  often  over  8ft,  diameter,  The  young  growth  and  often  the  foliage 


518 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiE. 


[Albizzia. 


clothed  with  a rusty  pubescence.  Leaves  oblong,  from  6 to  over  12in.  long,  with 
numerous  pinme  and  a depressed  gland  frequently  between  some  of  the  upper 
pairs ; leaflets  very  numerous,  linear,  obtuse,  8 or  4 lines  long,  with  the  nerve 
near  the  upper  margin,  the  base  almost  lobed  on  the  lower  side ; petiole  angular, 
pubescent,  with  an  oblong  prominent  gland  towards  the  middle.  Flowers  not 
seen.  Pods  about  Gin.  long  and  lin.  broad,  prominently  veined  with  forked 
netted  veins,  the  margins  thickened,  slightly  pubescent,  colour  of  pod  reddish- 
brown.  Seeds  orbicular,  along  the  centre  of  pod. 

Hab.:  Mackay,  Bowen,  Endeavour  River,  and  other  parts  of  tropical  Queensland. 

This  species  is  closely  allied  to  A.  lophantha,  Benth. 

Yields  a gum  which  contains  5C-4%  of  arabin  and  25%  of  metarabin. — Lauterer. 

Wood  light-coloured  for  several  inches  in  from  the  bark,  the  rest  resembling  Bed  Cedar.  A 
valuable  wood  for  many  purposes. — Hailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  145a. 

2.  A.  basaltica  (usually  found  on  basaltic  country),  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  422  ; F.  r.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xii.  9.  Dead  Finish.  A shrub ; branchlets  nearly  terete, 
rusty  with  a minute  glandular  pubescence.  Pinme  1 or  2 pairs,  the  common 
petiole  rarely  |in.  long  and  often  very  short ; leaflets  5 to  10  pairs,  oblong  or 
almost  ovate,  very  obtuse,  mostly  2 to  8 lines  long,  coriaceous,  minutely  hoary- 
pubescent.  Peduncles  in  the  upper  axils  scarcely  exceeding  the  leaves,  bearing  a 
dense  globular  head  of  about  20  to  30  flowers,  mostly  5-merous,  about  1J  line 
long.  Calyx  pubescent,  shortly  lobed,  about  two-thirds  as  long  as  the  corolla. 
Staminal  tube  nearly  as  long  as  the  corolla,  the  filaments  much  longer.  Pod 
about  Bin.  long,  4 to  5 lines  broad,  coriaceous,  very  flat,  with  thickened  margins. 
Seeds  flat,  orbicular. — Acacia  basaltica,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  146. 

Hab.:  Basaltic  plains,  Peak  Downs,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Bowen  Kiver,  Bowman ; Zanna  Creek  and 
Comet  River,  Leichhardt. 

Wood  towards  the  bark  bright-yellow,  heartwood  dark-red  ; close-grained  and  very  beautiful. 
An  excellent  cabinet  wood.—  Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  140. 


3.  A.  Thozetiana  (after  M.  A.  Thozet),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  422 ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xii.  10.  A tree,  attaining  50  to  60ft.,  with  a dense 
spreading  head,  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  hoary.  Pinnse  1 pair,  with  a short 
common  petiole ; leaflets  2,  3,  or  very  rarely  4 pairs,  cuneate-oblong  or  broadly 
linear,  very  obtuse,  the  end  ones  half  to  lin.  long,  the  lower  ones  much  smaller. 
Peduncles  in  the  upper  axils  £ to  lin.  long,  bearing  each  a globular  head  of  20  to 
30  or  more  flowers,  5-merous  or  sometimes  4-merous,  minutely  hoary-pubescent, 
about  1J  line  long.  Calyx  tubular,  more  than  half  as  long  as  the  corolla,  but 
narrower  than  in  the  preceding  species.  Pod  attaining  6 to  8in.  in  length  and  \ to 
Jin.  in  breadth,  very  flat,  with  thickened  margins.  Seeds  very  flat,  orbicular, 
bordered  by  a narrow  wing. — Acacia  Thozetiana,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  9. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill,  Leichhardt;  Fort  Cooper,  Rockhampton,  'Thozet;  Thozet’s  Creek, 
Dallachy. 

Wood  of  a red  colour,  hard,  heavy  and  durable  ; very  tough  and  close-grained. — Bailey’s  Cat- 
Ql.  Woods  No.  147. 

4.  A.  procera  (lofty),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  iii.  88,  and  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  422.  A tall  tree,  the  young  shoots  slightly  silky-pubescent,  at  length  glabrous. 
Pinnae  usually  3 pairs,  distant  along  a common  petiole  often  Ift.  long  ; leaflets  6 
to  8 pairs,  obliquely  oval-oblong,  usually  obtuse,  often  nearly  lin.  long  and  lin. 
broad,  very  unequally  narrowed  at  the  base,  penniveined  but  not  very  prominently 
so,  minutely  hoary-pubescent  or  glabrous  above.  Peduncles  about  lin.  long,  in 
clusters  of  2 or  3,  in  a loose  terminal  panicle,  each  bearing  a globular  head  of  15 
to  20  sessile  flowers,  mostly  5-merous,  and  scarcely  more  than  3 lines  long, 
including  the  stamens.  Corolla  slender,  less  than  2 lines  long,  divided  to  the 


Albizzia.] 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


519 


middle.  Pod  5 to  7in.  long,  9 to  10  lines  broad,  very  flat  and  thin.  Seeds  very 
flat,  orbicular. — Mimosa  procera,  Roxb.  PI.  Corom.  ii.  12,  t.  121  ; A.  elata,  Roxb. 
FI.  Ind.  iii.  546  ; Acacia  procera,  Willd.  Sp.  PI.  iv.  1063. 

Hab.:  Thursday  Island. 

Widely  distributed  over  S.E.  India  and  the  Archipelago. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  resembling  Walnut ; a useful  cabinet  wood. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods 
No.  148a. 


5.  A.  canescens  (hoary),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  423  ; F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xiii.  1. 
“ Thow-i-ee,”  Mackay,  Macartney.  A beautiful  spreading  tree,  the  young  shoots 
silky-pubescent,  the  adult  foliage  more  or  less  hoary  with  a very  minute  appressed 
pubescence.  Pinnae  usually  2 pairs,  rarely  with  a fifth  odd  pinna  or  a third  pair, 
the  common  petiole  2 to  4in.  long,  each  rhachis  3 to  6in.;  leaflets  5 to  8 pairs  on 
the  terminal  pinnae,  very  obliquely  obovate  and  unequally  narrowed  at  the  base, 
mostly  f to  ljin.  long,  fewer  and  smaller  on  the  lower  pinnae,  penniveined  but 
the  veins  much  less  prominent  than  in  A.  Lebbeck.  Flower-heads  small, 
numerous,  on  short  peduncles  in  dense  terminal  panicles  much  shorter  than  the 
last  leaves.  Flowers  sessile,  mostly  5-merous.  Calyx  about  1 line,  corolla  about 
2|  lines  long,  both  silky-pubescent.  Stamens  about  Jin.  long,  the  united  part 
shorter  than  the  corolla.  Pod  stipitate,  often  8 to  lOin.  long  and  1J  to  2Jin. 
broad  in  our  specimens,  very  thin  and  flat.  Seeds  flat,  orbicular,  along  the  centre 
of  the  pod. 

Hab.:  Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Fitzroy  and  Bowen  Rivers,  Boicman;  Rockhampton, 
Thozet,  Dallacliy. 

Allied  on  the  one  hand  to  A.  procera,  on  the  ofcher  to  A.  Lebbeck,  differing  from  the  former  in 
the  broader  flowers,  much  longer  stamens,  the  panicle  more  dense,  and  a much  broader  pod ; 
from  A.  Lebbeck  in  the  much  smaller  closely  sessile  flowers  and  broader  pod,  and  from  both  in 
the  general  aspect  of  the  foliage. — Benth. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  resembling  Walnut,  nicely  marked  ; suitable  for  cabinet-work. — Bailey's 
Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  148. 


94.  PITHECOLOBIUM,  Mart. 

(From  the  Greek — monkey-pod.) 

(Cathormion,  Hassk.) 

Calyx  campanulate  or  tubular.  Corolla  5-lobed,  with  a cylindrical  tube. 
Stamens  indefinite,  usually  numerous  and  long,  united  at  the  base  in  a tube 
enclosing  the  ovary.  Pod  flattened,  usually  rather  thick  and  much  curved, 
annular  or  spirally  twisted,  either  opening  entirely  or  on  the  outer  edge  in 
2 valves,  or  quite  indehiscent,  very  smooth  and  often  coloured  inside  or  with  a 
thin  pulp.  Seeds  ovate  or  orbicular ; funicle  filiform. — Trees  or  rarely  shrubs, 
without  prickles.  Leaves  twice  pinnate,  usually  with  a gland  on  the  petiole  below 
the  pinnee,  and  others  between  or  below  some  or  all  of  the  pinme  and  leaflets  ; 
leaflets  few  and  rather  large  in  all  the  Australian  species.  Flowers  in  globular 
or  oblong  heads  or  umbels,  or  rarely  in  cylindrical  spikes,  usually  hermaphrodite 
and  white,  the  stamens  rarely  red. 

A considerable  tropical  genus,  distributed  over  the  New  as  well  as  the  Old  World.  Of  the 
Australian  species,  one  is  also  in  the  Indian  Archipelago,  the  others  are  endemic. 
Pithecolobium,  with  the  flowers  and  fruit  of  some  sections  of  Inga,  only  differs  from  that 
genus  in  the  twice-pinnate,  not  simply  pinnate,  leaves.  Calliandra  and  Albizzia  have  the  same 
flowers  and  only  differ  in  the  pod.  Acacia  is  at  once  and  constantly  distinguished  by  the 
stamens  never  united  in  a tube  round  the  ovary. — Benth. 


Flowers  pedicellate  in  the  head  (umbellate). 

Leaflets  oblong  or  rhomboidal,  acuminate.  Pod  twisted,  2-valved  ...  1.  P.  pruinosum. 

Leaflets  obliquely  obovate,  obtuse.  Pod  indehiscent,  very  hard,  separating 

into  distinct  articles 2.  P.  moniUferum. 

Flowers  sessile,  the  corolla  Jin.  long.  Leaflets  acuminate,  glabrous  or  nearly  so  3.  P.  yrandijlorum. 


Past  II.  o 


520  XLIII.  LEGUMINOS/E.  [Pithecolobium. 

Leaves  like  P.  grandifiorum,  but  velvety-pubescent 4.  P.  Lovellce. 

Leaves  glabrous,  of  2 or  3 pairs  of  pinnce.  Leaflets  oblique  at  the  base, 

especially  the  upper  ones 5.  P.  Hendersonii. 

Leaflets  obovate,  almost  2in.  long,  decurrent  upon  the  petiolules  . . . . 6.  P.  ramijlora. 


1.  P.  pruinosum  (frosted  or  powdered),  Benth.  in  Loud.  Journ.  iii.  211, 
anil  FI.  Austr.  ii.  423  ; F.  v.  ill.  Ic.  Dec.  xiii.  2.  A beautiful  tree,  the  young 
branches,  foliage,  and  inflorescence  rusty  with  a short  pubescence  or  glabrous. 
Pinna?  very  irregularly  in  1 or  2 pairs,  with  or  without  an  odd  one,  the  petiole 
and  each  rhachis  varying  from  1 to  Gin.  long ; leaflets  usually  3 or  4 pairs  on  the 
terminal  pinnae,  but  very  irregular  in  number,  size,  and  shape,  mostly  broadly 
oblong  or  rhomboidal  and  acuminate,  rarely  very  obtuse,  the  larger  ones  often 
2 to  3in.  long,  but  mostly  smaller.  Peduncles  2 or  3 together  in  the  upper  axils 
or  shortly  racemose.  Flowers  numerous,  in  globular  umbels,  on  pedicels  of  about 
2 lines.  Calyx  small,  shortly  toothed.  Corolla  fully  2 lines  long.  Pod  several 
inches  long,  7 to  8 lines  broad,  flat  but  much  curved  and  twisted,  the  upper  inner 
margin  thickened  and  continuous,  the  outer  one  much  sinuate  and  undulate,  the 
valves  smooth  and  reddish  inside.  Seeds  ovate,  transverse  ; funicle  rather  thick, 
but  terete,  folded  under  the  seed. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham  and  others ; Rockhampton,  Thozet, 
Dallachy. 

Wood  of  a light-yellow  colour,  becoming  brown  near  the  centre  ; of  a very  disagreeable  odour 
when  newly  cut. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  149. 

The  Javanese  P.  Jungliuhnianum,  Benth.,  scarcely  differs  from  this  species. 

2.  P.  moniliferum  (pod  like  a necklace),  Benth.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ. 

iii.  211,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  421;  F.  v.  M.  Ic.  Dec.  xiii.  3.  “ Mullar,” 

Cloncurry,  Palmer.  A tree  with  a rugged  bark  and  wide-spreading  dense  head, 
the  young  shoots  usually  pubescent,  at  length  glabrous.  Pinna}  1 or  2 pairs,  the 
common  petiole  f to  lin.,  each  rhachis  1 to  2in.  long;  leaflets  4 to  7 pairs, 
obliquely  obovate  or  oval  oblong,  obtuse,  very  oblique  at  the  base,  shining  and 
reticulately  penniveined  above,  opaque  and  less  veined  underneath,  the  terminal 
ones  1,  If,  or  nearly  2in.  long,  the  others  smaller.  Peduncles  clustered  in  the 
upper  axils,  forming  a short  irregular  terminal  panicle.  Flowers  numerous,  in 
globular  umbels,  the  pedicels  about  If  in.  long.  Calyx  nearly  1 line,  corolla 
about  2 lines  long,  minutely  silky-pubescent.  Stamens  more  than  twice  as  long, 
the  united  part  nearly  as  long,  as  the  corolla.  Pod  usually  falcate,  3 to  4in. 
long,  fin.  broad,  very  thick  and  hard,  indehiscent  but  separating  into  closed 
1 -seeded  articles.  Seeds  transverse,  oblong,  flat  but  thick;  funicle  very  short. — 
Inga  monilifera,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  440  ; Cathormion  moniliferum,  Hassk.  Retzia,  231  ; 
Albizzia  anmnisshiia,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  viii.  165,  ix.  179. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown ; along  all  the  watercourses  round  the 
Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Leichhardt ; Armstrong  Creek,  Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft. 

The  species  was  originally  described  from  Timor,  and  is  in  several  islands  of  the  Indian 
Archipelago. — Benth. 

The  young  pods  roasted  and  eaten,  Mitchell  River. — Palmer. 

3.  P.  grandiflorum  (flowers  large,  showy),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  424  ; F.  v. 
M.  Ic.  Dec.  xiii.  4.  A beautiful  tree  of  30ft,,  or  a tall  shrub,  glabrous  or  nearly 
so.  Bark  smooth,  whitish.  Pinnte  1,  2,  or  3 pairs,  the  common  petiole  and 
each  rhachis  about  2 to  4in.  long  ; leaflets  2 to  6 pairs,  ovate,  acutely  acuminate, 
If  to  4in.  long,  less  oblique  and  firmer  than  in  P.  pruinosum,  penniveined. 
Flower-heads  numerous,  on  short  peduncles,  in  a terminal  panicle  scarcely 
exceeding  the  leaves.  Flowers  sessile,  silky-pubescent,  much  larger  than  in  any 
other  Pithecolobium . Calyx  campanulate,  sinuate-toothed,  nearly  3 lines  long. 
Corolla  fin.  long,  funnel-shaped,  5-lobed,  silky-pubescent  outside.  Stamens  of  a 
rich  crimson,  the  tubular  portion  nearly  as  long  as  the  corolla,  the  free  part 


Pithecolobium.\ 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSiB. 


521 


exceeding  it  by  about  lin.  Pod  about  5in.  long,  lin.  broad,  circularly  twisted, 
hard,  orange-coloured  inside.  Seeds  black,  shining,  egg-shaped,  transverse. — 
Mimosa  grandiflora,  Soland.  ms.;  Albizzia  Tozeri,  F.  v.  M.;  Trim.  Jl.  Bot.  x.  10. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander ; Cape  York,  IF.  Hill;  Hdgecombe  Bay, 
Dallachy ; coast  lands  throughout  the  colony. 

The  leaflets  often  destroyed  by  a fungus  blight  (Trabutia  pithecolobii , Cooke  and  Massee  i. 

Wood  light-yellow,  red  and  nicely  marked  towards  the  centre ; close  in  grain,  light,  and  easy 
to  work ; possessing  a most  disagreeable  odour  when  newly  cut. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods 
No.  149a. 

4.  P,  Lovellse  (after  the  Hon.  Miss  Lovell),  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  viii.  A small 
tree,  20  to  30ft.  high,  with  a brown  smooth  bark,  the  young  shoots  and 
inflorescence  clothed  with  dense  glossy  light-brown  hairs,  becoming  of  lighter 
colour  on  the  older  parts.  Leaves  velvety  pubescent,  usually  with  8 pairs  of 
pinnae.  The  common  petiole  short  in  the  leaves  examined,  about  l^in.  in  length, 
with  a sessile  gland  near  the  base  ; rhachis  about  3£in.  long,  bearing  a sessile 
gland  between  the  two  upper  pairs  of  pinn*  ; rhachis  of  pinnae  from  1 to  2^in. 
long,  the  uppermost  pairs  of  pinnte  and  leaflets  much  the  largest.  Leaflets  2 
pairs  each  on  the  lowest  and  4 on  the  terminal  pinnae,  nearly  sessile,  ovate  to 
nearly  oblong,  from  under  lin.  to  2fin.  long,  upper  surface  sparingly  hairy,  the 
under  surface  densely  tomentose,  margins  revolute.  Panicle  terminal,  rather 
short  (judging  from  the  specimen  to  halnd) ; the  sessile  flowers  in  irregular  head- 
like clusters.  Bracts  ovate  to  linear-lanceolate,  minute,  very  hairy.  Calyx 
campanulate,  thick,  coriaceous,  the  outside  densely  clothed  with  glossy,  somewhat 
bronze-coloured  hairs,  inside  glabrous  and  purplish  or  dark-coloured,  about 
5 lines  long,  teeth  5,  blunt.  Corolla-tube  exceeding  the  calyx  by  2 or  3 lines, 
then  expanding  and  funnel-shaped,  and  deeply  divided  into  5 linear  lobes,  clothed 
on  the  outside  with  pale  yellowish  velvety  hairs,  the  tube  and  lobes  glabrous  on 
the  inner  surface.  Stamens  filiform  and  very  numerous,  the  tubular  portion 
nearly  as  long  as  the  corolla-tube,  and  of  a deep  crimson,  free  portions  exserted 
beyond  the  corolla  about  lin.,  shading  from  light  to  deep  crimson.  Anthers  light- 
coloured,  minute  ; style  filiform,  longer  than  the  stamens. 

Hab.:  Fraser’s  Island,  Hon.  Miss  Lovell. 

This  species  in  many  respects  resembles  P.  grandiflorum , but  differs  from  that  species  in 
the  form  of  glands  and  foliage,  as  well  also  as  in  the  indumentum. 

5.  P.  Hendersonii  (after  J.  A.  Henderson),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  191,  vi. 
202  ; Ic.  Dec.  xiii.  5.  A tree  of  about  40ft.  high.  Leaves  glabrous,  of  2 or  3 
pairs  of  pinnae.  Leaflets  lanceolate,  sessile  and  oblique  at  the  base,  especially  the 
upper  pair  which  are  larger  than  the  lower,  often  3in.  long  and  l^in.  broad ; 
lateral  nerves  erectro-patent,  almost  parallel.  Peduncles  slender,  sometimes 
forked  and  bearing  2 heads,  forming  a sparsely-branched  terminal  panicle. 
Flowers  in  each  head  10  to  14,  shortly  pedicellate.  Calyx  glabrous,  short, 
sharply  toothed.  Corolla  glabrous,  elongate  more  than  twice  the  length  of  the 
calyx.  Staminal-tube  slender  with  the  free  portion  of  the  filaments  about  lin. 
long,  yellowish.  Pod,  when  fresh,  red  inside,  about  2in.  long  and  6 to  8 lines 
broad,  much  curved,  woody,  the  outer  margins  more  or  less  lobed  and  their 
opening  seeds  placed  transverse  in  the  pod,  oval,  black,  about  4 lines  long,  with- 
out any  marked  lateral  impression,  and  no  aril. 

Hab.:  Southern  scrubs  bordering  upon  N.  S.  Wales. 

6.  P.  ramiflora  (flowers  upon  the  branches),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ix.  178  (as 
Albizzia).  Glabrous.  Leaflets  almost  2in.  long,  chartaceous,  obovate,  decurrent 
on  very  short  petiolules.  Peduncles  almost  in  fascicles  from  swellings  in  the  bark 
of  the  branches  ; heads  with  many  flowers.  Bracts  semilanceolate  or  deltoid, 
about  1 line  long.  Calyx  sessile,  cylindric,  2 to  3 lines  long.  Corolla  scarcely 
over  lin.  long,  infundibuli-tubulose ; teeth,  5 unequal,  deltoid  or  semi-lanceolate, 


522 


XLIII.  LEGUMINOSjE. 


[Pithecolobium. 


vulvate,  often  partly  confluent,  H line  or  less  long.  Staminal-tube  slender, 
connate  with  the  tube  of  the  corolla  at  the  base ; the  tube  with  the  free  portion 
of  the  filaments  about  2in.  long.  Anthers  broad  as  long.  Ovary  1,  glabrous. 
Style  capillary,  attaining  a length  of  4in.  Stigma  very  minute.  Pod  not 
seen. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hub.:  Daintree  River,  E.  Fitzalan  (F.  v.  M.,  l.c  ) 


95.  ARCHIDENDRON,  F.  v.  M. 

(A  chief  of  trees.) 

Flowers  bisexual.  Calyx  truncate,  tubulous-campanulate.  Corolla  tubulous 
in  the  lower  part,  the  upper  part  irregularly  4 to  5-cleft.  Stamens  very  numerous, 
united  for  a good  part  of  their  length  and  adnate  to  the  lower  part  of  the  corolla. 
Filaments  long-exserted.  Anthers  cordate-ovate,  2-celled,  exappendiculate,  cells 
2-valved.  Ovary  wholly  or  partly  free.  Carpels  5.  Style  elongate,  setaceous. 
Pod  carnoso-coriaceous,  hard,  very  tardily  opening  in  2 valves,  turgid,  twisted 
or  curled,  not  pulpy  inside,  many-seeded.  Seeds  transverse,  long-ovate- 
exalbuminous.  Funicle  straight,  short;  no  aril.  Cotyledons  plano-convex  ; radicle 
short,  cylindrical. — Trees,  with  large  bipinnate  leaves,  and  usually  red-coloured 
showy  pods. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  59. 

Mueller  says,  Journ.  of  Bot.  x.  (1872)  10,  that  Archidendron  can  only  be  generically  separated 
from  Albizzia  (in  which  he  includes  Pithecolobium)  by  its  plurality  of  carpels. 


Leaves  of  1 pair  of  pinnas 1.  A.  Vaillantii. 

Leaves  of  2 pairs  of  pinnae 2.  A.  Lucyi. 


1.  A.  Vaillantii  (after  La  Vaillant),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  GO,  and  Ic.  Dec. 
xiii.  7.  A tree  of  about  50ft.  high,  with  a smooth  bark.  Leaves  paripinnate. 
Pinnse  1 pair ; leaflets  8 to  4 pairs,  almost  ovate  or  orbicular-ovate,  very  shortly 
petiolulate,  chartaceous,  3 to  7in.  long,  2 to  4|in.  broad,  nerves  and  veins 
prominent.  Umbels  or  heads  fasciculate  often  at  old  nodes  at  the  ends  of 
branchlets,  of  5 to  7 flowers,  with  now  and  then  a single  flower  below  the 
umbel.  Bracts  deltoid,  persistent,  1 to  lj  line  long.  Bracteoles  rather  smaller. 
Pedicels  thick,  about  1 line  long.  Calyx  4 to  6 lines  long,  bursting  irregu- 
larly. Corolla  about  lin.  long,  4 to  5-lobed ; lobes  semilanceolate,  valvate,  tube 
thick.  Stamens  very  numerous,  liin.  or  more  long.  Anthers  minute,  dorsifixed, 
cordato-rotund ; connective  brown,  cells  introrsus,  parallel,  distinct,  plainly  2- 
valved.  Disk  annular,  entire.  Ovary  free.  Style  1 to  2in.  long,  setaceous, 
pubescent  below.  Stigma  very  minute,  truncate,  concave-terminal.  Ovary 
oblique,  subulate-cylindrical,  silky-tomentose,  many-ovulate.  Pod  irregularly 
twisted  or  folded,  2 to  4£in.  long,  6 to  10  lines  broad,  scarcely  stipitate,  when 
fresh  a pleasing  red  outside,  yellow  (often  dark),  contracted  between  the  seeds, 
thick  and  the  margins  somewhat  crenulate.  Seeds  smooth,  black,  nearly  iin. 
long. — Pithecolobium  Vaillantii,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  9. 

Hab.:  Scrubs  of  the  Queensland  tropics. 

A poisonous  principle  is  contained  in  the  bark. — Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft. 

Wood  of  a red  colour,  close-grained,  strong  and  durable — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  I Voods  No.  150. 

2.  A.  I.ucyi  (after  M.  de  Lucy),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  vi.  201  ; Ic.  Dec.  xiii.  G. 
A small  tree  with  2-jugate  large  leaves;  petiole  about  4in.  long.  Pinnte  2 or  3- 
jugate;  leaflets  3 to  Gin.  long,  oblique  or  orbicular-ovate,  on  very  short  petiolules. 
Glands  between  the  petiolules  impressed,  lamina  shining  on  both  surfaces ; 
reticulate  veinlets  copious.  Inflorescence  in  racemose  panicles,  about  8in.  long, 
the  short  branches  bearing  usually  2 pedicellate  flowers  at  their  extremities. 
Pedicels  1 line  long.  Calyx  4 lines  long,  deltoidly  toothed.  Corolla  about  lin. 
long;  tube  elongate,  widening  upwards;  lobes  5,  rarely  G,  semilanceolate- 
deltoid,  valvate,  thickened  at  the  apex.  Staminal-tube  adnate  to  the  base  of  the 


Archidendron .] 


xliii.  leguminos^;. 


523 


corolla ; free  part  of  filament  about  lin.  long,  capillary.  Anthers  dorsifixed  ; 
cells  distinct,  parallel,  yellow.  Style  almost  2in.  long,  setaceous.  Ovary  many- 
ovulate.  Pod  generally  very  much  curved,  almost  circular,  compressed,  almost 
lin.  broad,  with  more  or  less  repand  margins.  Seeds  transverse,  ovate,  4 to  6 
lines  long,  black,  glossy. 

Hab.:  Tropical  scrubs. 


Order  XLIY.  ROSACEA. 

Calyx  either  enclosing  the  ovary,  or  adhering  to  it,  or  quite  free,  5 rarely  4- 
lobed,  with  the  addition  in  a few  genera  of  as  many  external  accessory  lobes. 
Petals  as  many  as  true  calyx-lobes,  inserted  on  the  calyx  at  the  base  of  the  lobes, 
or  in  Stylobasium  (Western  Australia)  hypogynous.  Stamens  indefinite,  rarely 
few,  inserted  with  the  petals,  free.  Ovary  of  1,  2 or  more  carpels,  usually 
distinct  at  the  time  of  flowering,  but  sometimes  combined  even  then  into  a 
single  2 to  5-celled  ovary,  which  is  then  always  inferior  or  combined  with  the 
calyx  ; ovules  1 or  2,  rarely  more  in  each  carpel  ; styles  or  sessile  stigmas 
distinct.  Fruiting-carpels  either  free  or  variously  combined  with  each  other  or 
with  the  calyx  indehiscent  or  rarely  opening  along  the  inner  edge.  Seeds 
without  albumen  or  rarely  albuminous  ; embryo  with  large  cotyledons  and  a 
short  radicle. — Trees,  shrubs,  or  herbs.  Leaves  alternate,  simple  or  compound, 
almost  always  with  stipules.  Flowers  in  axillary  or  terminal  cymes  or  solitary, 
very  rarely  in  simple  racemes. 

A numerous  Order,  widely  spread  over  the  globe,  but  more  in  the  temperate  and  cooler  parts 
of  the  northern  hemisphere  than  within  the  tropics  or  in  the  southern  hemisphere. — Benth. 

Tribe  I.  Chrysobalanem. — Flowers  usually  irregular.  Carpel  1;  style  basal;  ovules  2, 
ascending.  Fruit  a drupe.  Radicle  inferior. — Trees  or  shrubs,  with  simple  quite  entire  leaves. 

Petals  5 or  4.  Stamens  perigynous,  with  filiform  filaments  and  small  anthers  . 1.  Parinaridji. 

Tribe  II.  Pruneae. — Flowers  regular.  Carpel  1,  rarely  2;  style  subterminal,  rarely  basal; 
ovules  2,  pendulous.  Radicle  superior. — 'Trees  or  shrubs,  with  simple  usually  serrated  leaves. 

Calyx  5-lobed.  Petals  5,  large,  glabrous.  Carpel  solitary 2.  *Prunus. 

Calyx  5 to  10-toothed.  Petals  5,  minute  or  none.  Carpel  1.  Drupe  erect, 
coriaceous 3.  Pvgeuji. 

Tribe  III.  Xtubeae. — Flowers  regular.  Calyx  ebracteolate.  Stamens  very  numerous. 
Carpels  many ; styles  subbasal  or  ventral ; ovules  2,  collateral  pendulous.  Fruit  of  many  dry  or 
fleshy  carpels  not  included  in  the  calyx-tube.  Radicle  superior. — Usually  shrubs,  with  often 
compound  leaves. 

Calyx  slightly  imbricate,  without  accessory  lobes.  Fruit-carpels  succulent  . . 4.  Rubus. 

Tribe  IV.  Potentillese. — Flowers  regular.  Calyx  usually  bracteolate.  Stamens  usually 
numerous,  rarely  few.  Carpels  1 or  more  ; style  short  or  much  prolonged  after  flowering ; ovules 
solitary , ascending.  Fruit  of  many  achenes,  not  included  in  the  calyx-tube.  Radicle  superior. — 
Herbs  or  small  shrubs,  with  various  leaves. 

Calyx  bracteolate.  Stamens  numerous.  Styles  not  elongating.  Ripe  carpels 
seated  on  a fleshy  receptacle 5.  *Fragaria. 

Tribe  V.  Poteriese. — Flowers  regular,  sometimes  apetalous.  Calyx-tube  often  urceolate. 
Stamens  1 or  more.  Carpels  1 to  3 ; style  terminal;  ovule  1.  Acliene  sunk  in  the  calyx-tube. — 


Herbs  or  small  shrubs. 

Ovule  pendulous.  Style  terminal  or  nearly  so.  Leaves  pinnate.  Fruiting- 
calyx  armed  with  prickles.  Stamens  few 6.  Ac.exa. 

Tribe  VI.  R.  o S e no . — Flowers  regular.  Calyx-tube  urceolate.  Petals  5.  Stamens  very 
numerous.  Carpels  many,  free ; ovule  1,  pendulous.  Acliene  included  in  the  Jlesliy  calyx-tube. — 
Shrubs,  leaves  compound. 

Carpels  several,  enclosed  in  the  calyx  tube.  Petals  present.  Stamens  numerous. 

Prickly  shrubs,  with  pinnate  leaves 7.  *Rosa. 


524 


XLIV.  ROSACEA. 


1.  PARIN ARIUM,  Juss. 

(From  Parinari,  native  name  of  a Guiana  species.) 

(Petrocarya,  Jack ; Grymania,  Presl.) 

Calyx-lobes  5,  imbricate.  Petals  5,  rarely  4.  Stamens  numerous  or  rarely 
few,  all  perfect  or  those  on  one  side  reduced  to  small  staminodia  ; filaments 
filiform  ; anthers  small.  Ovary  of  a single  carpel,  adnate  on  one  side  to  the 
mouth  of  the  calyx-tube  and  protruding  from  it,  more  or  less  completely  2-celled, 
with  1 erect  ovule  in  each  cell ; style  from  the  base  of  the  ovary.  Drupe  ovoid  or 
spherical,  the  endocarp  bony.  Seeds  1 or  2,  erect. — Trees.  Leaves  alternate, 
coriaceous,  entire.  Stipules  deciduous,  usually  small.  Flowers  white  or  pink,  in 
cymes  forming  terminal  raceme-like  or  corymbose  panicles. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  the  tropical  regions  both  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World.  Of  the 
two  Australian  species,  one  is  also  in  the  Indian  Archipelago,  the  other  is  endemic. — Benth. 


Petiole  without  glands.  Leaves  much  veined.  Flowers  small.  Calyx- 

lobes  acute.  Perfect  stamens  about  8 1.  P.  Nonda. 

Petiole  with  2 glands.  Leaves  shining,  little  veined.  Flowers  rather  large. 

Calyx-lobes  obtuse.  Perfect  stamens  30  to  50 2.  P.  Griffithianum. 


1.  P.  Nonda  (see  note  at  foot),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  426. 

“ Ran-na,”  Morehead  River,  N.Q.,  “ Wo-in-ya,”  Cooktown,  Both.  Branches 

rather  slender,  loosely  tomentose  when  young.  Leaves  ovate,  obtuse  or  obtusely 
acuminate,  rounded  or  almost  cordate  at  the  base,  2 to  Bin.  long,  1 to  14in. 
broad,  rarely  narrower  and  narrowed  at  each  end,  glabrous  but  rather  rough 
above,  whitish  with  a minute  tomentum  underneath,  with  many  prominent 
parallel  pinnate  veins  and  much  reticulate  between  them.  Flowers  small,  the 
terminal  panicle  or  thyrsus  loose,  the  axillary  ones  smaller  and  raceme-like. 
Bracts  shorter  than  the  flowers,  deciduous.  Calyx  pubescent,  nearly  re’gular, 
about  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  acute,  rather  shorter  than  the  tube  and  almost  as 
long  as  the  petals.  Stamens  short,  usually  about  8 perfect  on  the  same  side  of 
the  flower  as  the  ovary,  the  ring  completed  by  6 to  10  small  staminodia.  Drupe 
ovoid,  densely  villous  inside,  2-celled,  2-seeded. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria;  Gilbert  Biver,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Cape  York,  M'Gillivray ; Albany 
Island,  V.  v.  Mueller. 

The  speeies  is  nearly  allied  to  the  P.  sumatranum  of  the  Indian  Archipelago,  and  still  more  to 
the  African  P.  curatellecfolium , Planch.,  but  the  flowers  appear  to  be  smaller  than  in  either,  with 
some  slight  differences  in  the  foliage.  It  is  the  one  to  which  Leichhardt  gives  the  name  of 
“ Nonda-tree”  in  his  travels. — Benth. 

Leichhardt  says  that  he  called  this  tree  Nonda  from  its  likeness  to  some  tree  so-called  by  the 
natives  of  the  Moreton  Bay  district. 

Wood  a light-yellow;  cross  in  grain  ; very  tough. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  151. 

2.  P.  Griffithianum  (after  Dr.  Griffith,  a collector  of  Malacca  plants), 
Benth.  in  Hook.  FI.  Nig.  834,  and  FI.  Austr.  ii.  426;  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  viii.  34. 
A tree  about  30ft.  high.  Branches  stout,  glabrous  or  minutely  hoary  when 
young.  Leaves  elliptical-oblong,  acuminate,  3 to  4in.  long  or  rather  more,  acute 
at  the  base,  shining  above,  paler  underneath,  but  quite  glabrous,  the  veins  not 
very  prominent  and  distant ; 2 small  glands  at  the  top  of  the  petiole.  Flowers 
rather  large,  in  terminal  corymbose  hoary-pubescent  panicles.  Calyx-tube 
obliquely  turbinate,  incurved,  about  2 lines  long  ; lobes  very  obtuse,  the  largest 
as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  white,  exceeding  the  calyx.  Stamens  very  numerous 
(30  to  50),  all  perfect.  Ovary  very  villous,  with  a long  style.  Drupe  oblong, 
very  villous  inside,  2-celled,  2-seeded. 

Hab.:  Cape  York  Peninsula,  F.  v.  M. 

The  species  extends  over  the  Indian  Archipelago  to  the  Philippine  Islands,  for  Grymania 
salicifolia,  Presl.,  Epimel,  Bot.  193  (Cuming,  n.  1057),  appears  to  be  the  same  species, 
although  with  rather  narrower,  more  rigid  leaves. — Benth. 


Pl.X/X. 


Pygaum/  Tur neruuunn  ,BcuL. 


Govflxth/)  Office 

Jlrisb/TTic.  (f 


F C WULs 


XLIV.  ROSACEA. 


525 


2.  *PRUNUS,  Linn. 

(Latin  name  of  the  Plum-tree.) 

Calyx  deciduous  in  fruit;  lobes  5,  imbricate.  Petals  5.  Stamens  15  to  60, 
perigynous,  inserted  in  the  mouth  of  the  calyx-tube  ; filaments  free.  Carpel  1 ; 
style  terminal ; ovules  2,  collateral,  pendulous.  Drupe  with  an  indebiscent  or  2- 
valved,  1 -seeded,  smooth  or  rugged  stone.  Seed  pendulous  ; testa  membranous 
or  coriaceous  ; albumen  scanty  or  none. — Shrubs  or  trees.  Leaves  alternate, 
simple,  quite  entire  or  serrate,  or  crenate,  or  glandular-serrulate ; petiole  often 
2-glandular.  Flowers  white  or  red,  solitary,  fascicled,  corymbose,  or  racemed. 

Sect.  I.  Amys  dalus. — Leaves  conduplicate  in  bud.  Flowers  subsessile.  Drupe  usually 
pubescent ; stone  bony,  rugged. 

1.  I».  persica  (Persian),  Benth.  and  Hook.  Gen.  PI.  i.  609.  The  common 
Peach.  Leaves  appearing  after  or  with  the  flowers,  oblong-lanceolate,  serrate ; 
petiole  glandular  or  not,  shorter  than  the  leaf  is  broad ; stipules  fimbriate. 
Flowers  sessile;  calyx  campanulate  ; pericarp  indebiscent. — Amygdalus  persica, 
Linn.;  Persica  vulgaris,  Miller. 

Hab.:  This  well-known  fruit  is  often  to  be  seen  growing  along  the  sides  of  railway  lines  in 
southern  Queensland. 

The  fungi  which  I have  observed  upon  the  foliage  are  Exoascus  deformans,  Berk.,  Cercospora 
circumscissa,  Sacc.,  and  Uromyces  amygdali,  Cooke. 


3.  PYGEUM,  Gtertn. 

(From  the  Greek  puge ; supposed  resemblance  of  fruit-stones.) 

Calyx-tube  obconic,  urceolate,  or  campanulate,  deciduous  ; limb  5 to  15- 
toothed,  often  unequally.  Petals  minute,  5 to  6 in  the  5 to  6-toothed  calyx,  none 
in  the  10  to  15-toothed,  villous  or  tomentose,  rarely  glabrous,  often  undistin- 
guishable  from  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  10  to  50,  in  one  or  more  series  at  the 
orifice  of  the  calyx-tube ; filaments  slender,  incurved;  anthers  small.  Carpel  1, 
basal  in  the  calyx-tube,  ovoid  or  subglobose ; style  terminal,  slender,  exserted 
from  the  bud  ; stigma  capitate ; ovules  2,  collateral,  pendulous.  Fruit  a trans- 
versely oblong,  obscurely  didymous,  rarely  subglobose  drupe  ; pericarp  thin,  dry, 
or  juicy.  Cotyledons  very  thick,  hemispheric ; radicle  minute,  superior. — 
Evergreen  trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  alternate,  persistent,  usually  quite  entire ; 
stipules  minute,  fugaceous,  basal  glands  2 or  none.  Flowers  small,  racemose, 
sometimes  unisexual  by  want  of  ovary. — Hook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  318. 

Differs  from  Prunus  chiefly  in  the  minute  villous  petals  (when  present)  and  form  of  the  fruit. 
The  often  conspicuous  basal  pair  of  glands  on  the  leaf  are  very  variable  ; a few  species  have 
scattered  glands,  and  one  has  bullate  glands  on  the  tip  of  the  petiole,  formed  by  a prolongation 
of  the  leaf-blade. — Hook.  l.c. 

The  genus  contains  about  20  species,  all  of  tropical  Asia,  except  one  tropical  African 
species,  the  Queensland  species,  and  another  in  New  Guinea. 

1.  P.  Turnerianum  (after  F.  Turner),  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  viii.  “ Joon-da,” 
Bloomfield  River,  Roth;  “ Abill  ” (tree  and  fruit),  Barron  River,  Cowley.  A 
small  tree  with  small  flanges  at  base  of  the  trunk ; the  leafy  part  of  the  branches 
densely  clothed  with  ferruginous  hairs.  Leaves,  upper  surface  bright  glossy 
green,  the  under  surface  pale,  entire,  lanceolate  or  oblong-lanceolate,  4 to  6.)in. 
long,  to  2Jin.  broad,  primary  veins  rather  distant,  very  oblique,  and  looping 
near  the  margin,  prominent  on  the  under  side  ; upper  surface  rather  glossy,  with 
short  appressed  hairs  along  the  midrib,  and  sometimes  on  other  parts  of  the 
surface ; the  under  side  more  or  less  hairy,  with  rather  rigid  appressed  hair  of  a 
somewhat  yellowish  tinge,  tapering  to  a slender  petiole  of  3 to  5 lines  ; basal 
glands  irregular  as  to  position,  and  number  1,  2,  or  3,  sometimes  a marginal  one 
on  each  side  of  the  midrib  below  the  lowest  pair  of  lateral  nerves,  sometimes 


526 


XLIV.  ROSACEA. 


[Pygeum. 


above  on  one  side  and  below  on  the  other,  or  with  a gland  below  the  second  pair 
of  nerves,  oval,  dark-coloured.  Racemes  numerous,  lateral,  1 or  2in.  long, 
slender,  and  softly  ferruginous  tomentose  flowers,  male,  nearly  sessile  ; calyx- 
tube  -widely  campanulate,  about  2 lines  diameter,  glabrous,  and  probably  purplish 
inside,  except  for  a tuft  of  ferruginous  hairs  in  place  of  ovary  ; lobes  about  12, 
narrow,  very  hairy,  the  hairs  longer  at  the  apex,  nearly  as  long  as  the  tube. 
Stamens  between  30  and  40,  filaments  coloured,  glabrous,  a little  longer  or  about 
as  long  as  the  lobes  of  calyx.  Anthers  oblong.  Female  flowers  wanting.  Drupe 
with  a rich  plum  coloured  pericarp,  transversely  slightly  exceeding  lin.  in  diameter  ; 
the  putamen  bluntly  cordate  and  much  compressed,  nearly  lin.  broad,  light-brown, 
marked  with  prominent  arching,  branched  hard  ribs,  reticulate  between  them. 

Hab.:  Bellenden  Ker,  Christie  Palmerston  and  A.  Meston  (seeds  only);  flower  and  fruiting 
specimens,  Barron  River,  E.  Coiclcy ; Evelyn,  near  Herberton,  J.  F.  Bailey. 

Wood  of  a red  colour  in  the  centre,  nicely  marked,  easy  to  work;  useful  for  turnery  and 
cabinet-work. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  TCoods  No.  150a. 


4.  RUBUS,  Linn. 

(Fruit  of  some  species  red.) 

Calyx-tube  short,  open  ; lobes  5,  imbricate,  without  external  accessory  ones. 
Petals  5,  erect  or  spreading.  Stamens  indefinite.  Carpels  indefinite,  with  2 
pendulous  ovules  in  each,  one  of  them  smaller  and  abortive ; styles  terminal. 
Fruit  a head  of  succulent  carpels,  forming  a kind  of  granulated  berry  round  the 
conical  or  shortly  oblong  dry  or  spongy  receptacle. — Weak  scrambling  shrubs  or 
rarely  prostrate  and  almost  herbaceous,  usually  prickly.  Leaves  pinnately  or 
palmately  divided  into  distinct  segments  or  leaflets  or  lobed  only,  the  lobes  or 
segments  toothed.  Flowers  axillary  or  in  terminal  leafy  panicles. 


A considerable  genus,  dispersed  over  most  parts  of  the  globe. 

Prickly  shrubs,  scrambling,  climbing,  or  almost  erect.  Flowers  pink  or  white. 

Leaves  broad,  toothed  or  lobed,  rusty  underneath 1.  JR.  moluccanus. 

Leaves  pinnate,  with  3 or  5 leaflets,  white-tomentose  underneath.  Fruit 

with  few  large  carpels 2.  R.  parvifolius. 

Leaves  pinnate,  with  5 or  7 leaflets,  green  on  both  sides.  Fruit  with 

numerous  small  carpels 3.  R.  roscefolius. 

Glabrous.  Leaflets  3 to  9.  Bracts  laciniate 4.  B.  Muelleri. 

Leaves  digitate,  with  5 leaflets  on  long  petiolules 5.  R.  Moorei. 


1.  It.  moluccanus  (of  the  Moluccas),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  ii.  566  ; Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  430.  A tall  scrambling  shrub  ; branches  and  petioles  terete,  clothed 
with  a short  rusty  or  white  woolly  down,  often  mixed  with  longer  hairs,  and 
armed  with  numerous  small  recurved  prickles.  Leaves  usually  broadly  ovate- 
cordate,  toothed,  shortly  and  broadly  3 or  5-lobed,  2 to  4in.  long,  occasionally 
deeply  3-lobed  but  not  quite  to  the  midrib,  green,  somewhat  rugose  and  glabrous 
or  sprinkled  with  a few  hairs  above,  rusty  or  whitish-tomentose  underneath,  the 
principal  veins  more  villous  and  often  armed  with  prickles.  Flowers  red,  irregu- 
larly clustered  in  short  panicles  in  the  upper  axils,  the  upper  ones  forming  a 
terminal  panicle,  usually  very  silky-villous.  Bracts  deeply  cut,  very  deciduous. 
Pedicels  usually  short  when  in  flower,  longer  in  fruit.  Calyx-lobes  acuminate,  4 
or  5 lines  long.  Fruit  nearly  globular,  glabrous,  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx- 
lobes,  red,  insipid  or  slightly  acid. — B.  Hillii,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Phil.  Inst. 
Viet.  iii.  67,  and  Fragm.  iv.  31. 

Hab.:  Common  in  coastal  scrubs,  north  and  south. 

The  species  extends  over  the  Indian  Archipelago  to  the  Philippines,  and  the  closely  allied  B. 
rugosus,  Sm.,  and  R.  reflexus,  Bot.  Reg.,  to  E.  India  and  China.  The  majority  of  the  Australian 
specimens  belong  to  a form  precisely  the  same  as  one  common  in  the  Archipelago,  which  appears 
to  be  that  originally  described  by  Rumphius. — Bentli. 

The  leaves  of  this  bramble  are  frequently  infested  with  that  curious  blight  fungus  Hamaspora 
longissima,  Korn. 


Fatbits.  J 


XLIV.  ROSACEA. 


527 


2.  It.  parvifolius  (small-leaved),  Linn.:  DC.  Prod.  ii.  564 ; Benth.  FI. 

Austr.  ii.  480.  “ Neram,”  north  Queensland,  Tliozet.  A scrambling  shrub; 

branches  softly  pubescent  or  woolly,  armed  with  small  hooked  prickles. 
Leaves  pinnate,  with  a common  petiole  of  1 to  2in.;  leaflets  3 or  very  rarely  5, 
nearly  orbicular,  about  f to  lin.  long  or  in  luxuriant  shoots  nearly  twice  as 
much,  deeply  and  irregularly  toothed,  glabrous  or  sprinkled  with  a few  hairs 
and  deeply  wrinkled  above,  white  and  tomentose  or  woolly  underneath.  Flowers 
few,  in  short  terminal  panicles  or  solitary  in  the  upper  axils.  Bracts  narrow, 
entire  or  rarely  lobed.  Sepals  varying  from  2 to  5 lines  long,  acuminate,  softly 
hairy  inside  and  out.  Petals  pink,  usually  erect  and  shorter  than  the  calyx, 
rarely  longer  and  spreading.  Fruit  globular,  red,  of  a pleasant  flavour,  the 
carpels  rather  large  and  not  numerous,  glabrous  or  slightly  hairy. — Bot.  Reg. 
t.  496  ; R.  ribesifolius,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.;  R.  macropodus,  Ser.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  557  ; 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  112  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  30,  and  PI.  Viet.  ii.  t.  15  ; R. 
Zalilbrucknerianus,  Endl.  Atakt.  t.  35. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  Fraser,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Rockhampton,  Dallachy ; in  the  interior,  on  the 
Maranoa,  Mitchell ; plains  of  the  Condamine,  Leichhardt ; and  Brisbane  River. 

The  species  ranges  from  S.  China  to  Loochoo,  but  I have  seen  no  specimens  from  the  tropical 
regions  intervening  between  that  and  Australia. — Benth. 

3.  It.  rosaefolius  (rose-leaved),  Sin.  Ic.  PI.  t.  60-;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  431. 
Native  Raspberry.  A shrub,  with  creeping  stolons  and  ei'ect  and  weak  but 
scarcely  climbing  stems,  glandular-pubescent  or  rarely  glabrous,  armed  with 
straight  or  more  frequently  recurved  prickles.  Leaves  pinnate ; leaflets  5, 
rarely  3 or  7,  ovate-lanceolate,'  acuminate,  coarsely  and  usually  doubly  toothed, 
1,  2,  or  even  3in.  long,  green  and  glandular-pubescent  on  both  sides  or  rarely 
glabrous.  Flowers  white,  not  numerous,  in  a short  terminal  panicle  or  in  the 
upper  axils.  Bracts  narrow,  mostly  entire.  Sepals  hoary-tomentose,  3,  4,  or 
rarely  5 lines  long,  with  a long  subulate  point.  Petals  spreading.  Fruit  ovoid 
or  rarely  globular,  with  exceedingly  numerous  small  carpels,  not  very  succulent, 
of  a pleasant  flavour. — Ser.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  556  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  1783  (with 
double  flowers) ; Hook.  Ic.  PL  t.  349  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  158  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm. 
iv.  32  ; R.  erjlanteria,  Tratt.;  Ser.  in  DC.  Prod.  ii.  556. 

Hab.:  Coastal  land  throughout  Queensland. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  the  warmer  regions  of  Africa  and  Asia. 

4.  R.  IVEuelleri  (after  Baron  Mueller),  Bail.  Proc.  Roy.  Soc.  Ql.  i.  A large 
scrambling  shrub.  Branches  glabrous,  armed  with  scattered  recurved  prickles. 
Leaves  pinnate,  3 to  9in.  long,  of  3 to  9 ovate-acuminate  or,  when  small,  often 
obtuse  pinnae,  which  are  coarsely  and  doubly  toothed.  Flowers  white,  in  terminal 
panicles  of  4 to  10  flowers ; bracts  narrow,  laciniate.  Sepals  slightly  hoary, 
points  subulate.  Petals  spreading,  not  so  large  as  in  R.  rosafolius.  Fruit  red, 
glossy,  nearly  globular,  J to  lin.  diameter.  Carpels  small,  numerous,  succulent, 
and  with  an  agreeable  acid  flavour. 

Hab.:  Helidon. 

After  I had  published  this  species,  Baron  von  Mueller  wrote  me  that  he  had  received 
specimens  of  this  plant  from  Queensland,  and  had  marked  it  in  his  herbarium  as  R.  rosce- 
folius,  var.  eglandulosus ; but,  as  it  was  not  published  by  him  under  that  name,  and  I consider 
it  of  specific  distinction,  I keep  it  as  above. 

5.  R.  Moorei  (after  C.  Moore),  F.v.M.in  Trans.  Phil.  Inst.  Viet.  ii.  67, 
and  Fragm.  iv.  29  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  431.  A tall  scrambling  shrub,  the 
branches  and  petioles  glabrous  or  loosely  tomentose,  with  numerous  small  reflexed 
prickles.  Leaves  digitate,  with  5 petiolulate  leaflets,  ovate-lanceolate,  acutely 
acuminate,  3 to  4in.  long,  and  bordered  by  regular  prickly  teeth  in  the  glabrous 
or  slightly  pubescent  specimens  ; in  the  more  tomentose  ones  shorter,  broader  in 
proportion,  more  coriaceous,  with  shorter  teeth,  glabrous  above,  softly  velvety  or 


528 


XLIV.  ROSACEA. 


[ilubils. 


villous  underneath.  Flowers  white,  unisexual  or  polygamous,  in  loose  axillary 
racemes  or  raceme-like  panicles.  Bracts  small,  entire.  Calyx  pubescent,  very 
spreading,  the  segments  ovate  or  oblong,  obtuse,  2 to  3 lines  long.  Fruit  said 
to  be  dark-red  and  insipid. 

Hab.:  Tallebudgera  Creek,  Rev.  B.  Scortechini. 

The  nearest  affinity  of  this  species  is  with  the  New  Zealand  R.  australis,  Forst.,  but  the  leaves 
of  the  latter  species,  although  protean  in  their  forms,  never  quite  resemble  those  of  R.  Moorei ; 
the  flowers  are  much  smaller  and  very  much  more  numerous,  in  large  panicles,  &c. — Benth. 


5.  *FRAGARIA,  Linn. 

(Fruit  fragrant.) 

Calyx  persistent,  with  5 bracteoles  at  its  base ; lobes  5,  valvate  in  the  bud- 
Petals  5.  Stamens  many,  persistent.  Carpels  many,  on  a convex  receptacle ; 
styles  ventral,  persistent ; ovule  1,  ascending.  Achenes  many,  minute,  sunk  in 
the  surface  of  a large  fleshy  receptacle.  Perennial  scapigerous  herbs,  with 
creeping  stolons.  Leaves  digitately  3,  rarely  5,  foliolate,  very  rarely  pinnate  or 
simple.  Stipules  adnate  to  the  petiole.  Flowers  white  or  yellow,  often 
polygamous. 

1.  F.  indica  (Indian),  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  479  ; Rook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  343. 
Indian  Strawberry.  A more  or  less  silky-hairy  plant.  Rootstock  stout,  with 
many  long,  slender  prostrate  stems.  Leaves  distant ; leaflets  3 to  5,  rarely  5, 
1 to  l^in.  diameter,  petiolulate  or  sessile  ; membranous,  simply  or  doubly  crenate, 
or  toothed,  or  serrate  ; base  cuneate,  entire  ; nerves  parallel.  Petiole  1 to  5in. 
long,  very  slender.  Stipules  leafy,  toothed.  Peduncles  very  slender,  equalling 
the  petioles,  naked.  Flowers  J to  lin.  diameter.  Calyx-lobes  ovate  or  lanceolate ; 
bracteoles  narrow  or  broad,  often  greatly  exceeding  the  calyx-lobes,  rarely  quite 
entire.  Petals  obovate,  cordate,  yellow.  Fruit  spherical  or  oblong,  bright  red, 
spongy,  insipid  ; achenes  minute,  obscurely  pitted. — Hook.  l.c. 

This  Indian  plant  has  in  some  localities  strayed  from  garden  culture  into  adjoining  pastures. 

The  leaves  are  often  discoloured  with  the  fungus  Phyllosticta  fragaricola,  Desm.,  or  P. 
fragaria,  Cooke. 


6.  ACyENA,  Linn. 

(From  akaina,  a spine  ; spinous  calyxes.) 

(Ancistrum,  Forst.) 

Calyx-tube  ovoid  or  campanulate  ; lobes  usually  4 or  5,  but  varying  from  3 to 
7,  valvate.  Petals  none.  Stamens  2 to  10.  Carpels  1 or  rarely  2,  enclosed  in 
the  calyx-tube,  with  1 pendulous  ovule  in  each ; style  terminal  or  nearly  so, 
protruding  from  the  calyx-tube,  usually  dilated  into  an  oblique  fringed  stigma. 
Achene  solitary,  dry,  enclosed  in  the  hardened  tube  of  the  calyx,  which  is  usually 
closed  at  the  top  and  more  or  less  awned  with  subulate  or  conical  spines,  often 
glochidiate  at  the  end. — Herbs,  with  a perennial  tufted  stock.  Leaves  radical  or 
alternate,  pinnate,  with  toothed  or  cut  leaflets.  Stipules  sheathing  at  the  base. 
Flowers  hermaphrodite  or  polygamous,  small,  green  or  purplish,  in  a terminal 
globular  head,  or  in  an  elongated  or  interrupted  spike,  the  flowering-stem  either 
leafy  or  reduced  to  a leafless  scape. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  the  temperate  and  colder  regions  of  the  southern  hemisphere ; it 
is  especially  abundant  in  S.  America,  and  occurs  also  in  California,  Mexico,  and  the  Sandwich 
Islands.  The  following  Australian  species  are  apparently  also  natives  of  S.  America  and  New 
Zealand. 

The  genus  has  been  divided  into  two  sections — Fuaccena,  with  the  fruiting  calyx  moqe  or  less 
angular,  the  spines,  when  present,  one  only  to  each  angle  ; and  Ancistrum,  with  the  calyx  ovoid, 
irregularly  covered  with  numerous  spikes  or  tubercles.  In  the  former,  the  flowers  are  usually 


Actrna.] 


XLIV.  ROSACEA. 


529 


capitate,  but  spicate  in  a few  species  ; in  the  latter  they  are  spicate  in  most  if  not  all  species. 
There  are  a few  species,  however  (not  Australian),  with  the  spines  not  developed,  and  ambiguous 


between  the  two  sections. — Bentli. 

Spike  cylindrical  or  elongated  and  interrupted.  Stamens  4 to  10.  Spines 

of  the  fruiting  calyx  numerous,  irregularly  scattered 1.  A.  ovina. 

Heads  globular.  Stamens  2.  Spines  of  the  fruiting  calyx  4,  1 to  each 
angle.  Calyx-lobes  united  at  the  base,  usually  persistent.  Fruiting  head 
above  Jin.  diameter,  with  long  glochidiate  spines 2.  A.  sanguisorbce. 


1.  A.  ovina  (sheep  Acmna),  A.  Cunn.  in  Field,  N.  S.  Wales,  358;  Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  433.  Stems  ascending  or  erect,  leafy,  1 to  2ft.  high,  silky-hairy. 
Leaflets  ovate,  from  orbicular  to  oblong,  f to  fin.  long,  deeply  and  obtusely 
crenate  or  pinnatifid,  glabrous  above,  silky-hairy  underneath.  Flowers  in  a long 
interrupted  spike,  more  dense  towards  the  end,  polygamous.  Calyx-lobes  usually 
5,  rarely  4,  6,  or  7.  Stamens  in  the  males  either  about  as  many  or  8 to  10,  in 
the  females  reduced  to  minute  staminodia,  or  1 or  2 of  them  filiform,  without 
anthers.  Ovary  in  the  females  with  a single  or  rarely  2 ovules  ; style  obliquely 
dilated  at  the  end,  with  a broad  unilateral  fringed  stigma.  Fruit  ovoid,  2 to  3 
lines  long,  glabrous  or  loosely  villous,  covered  with  short  prickles,  barbed  at  the 
end  and  irregularly  arranged,  2 or  3 of  them  usually  longer  than  the  others,  with 
a conical  base. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  115  ; A.  echinata,  Nees  in  PI.  Preiss,  i.  95  ; 
A.  Behriana,  Schlecht.  Linnasa,  xx.  660  (calyx  often  6 or  7-lobed,  stamens 
often  10). 

Hab.:  Many  parts  of  southern  Queensland. 

The  species  extends  to  New  Zealand,  and  probably  also  to  extratropieal  S.  America,  for  A. 
montevidensis,  Hook.  f.  FI.  Antarct.  ii.  265,  appears  to  be  quite  the  same. — Benth. 

2.  A.  sanguisorbae  (Burnet-leaved),  Vahl. ; DC.  Prod.  ii.  492  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  434.  Stems  prostrate  or  creeping  and  rooting  at  the  nodes,  the 
flowering  branches  ascending  from  a few  inches  to  nearly  1ft.,  loosely  silky- 
villous,  leafy  at  the  base.  Leaflets  from  nearly  orbicular  and  fin.  long  to  oblong 
and  fin.,  prominently  toothed,  glabrous  or  nearly  so  above,  silky-hairy  under- 
neath. Flowers  numerous,  in  dense  globular  heads,  on  long  terminal  peduncles, 
usually  under  Jin.  diameter  at  the  time  of  flowering,  becoming  when  in  fruit 
dense  globular  burrs  of  fin.  diameter  or  more.  Calyx-lobes  usually  4.  Stamens 
2.  Style  with  the  fringed  stigma  of  A.  ovina.  Fruiting  calyx  nearly  2 lines 
long,  turbinate,  the  lobes  4-angled,  with  a long  prickle  barbed  at  the  end, 
diverging  from  near  the  summit  of  each  angle. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  114  ; 
A.  sarmentosa,  Carmich.;  DC.  l.c. 

Hab.:  In  the  cooler  parts  of  the  colony. 

The  species  is  also  found  in  New  Zealand,  Tristan  d’Acunha,  and  Lord  Auckland’s  Isles,  and 
it  is  perhaps  not  really  distinct  from  the  S.  American  A.  ovalifolia,  Ruiz,  and  Pav. — Benth. 


7.  ’•ROSA,  Linn. 

(From  the  red  colour  of  the  flowers.) 

Calyx-tube  dilated,  narrowed  at  the  mouth  ; limb  5-partite,  segments  spreading, 
entire  or  pinnately  toothed.  Petals  5,  sessile,  spreading.  Stamens  indefinite, 
inserted  in  mouth  of  calyx-tube;  ovary  1-celled,  with  a pendulous  ovule. 
Achenes  indefinite,  included  in  the  fleshy  persistent  calyx-tube. — Shrubs,  often 
scandent,  usually  aculeate.  Leaves  alternate,  imparipinnate  ; stipules  adnate  to 
the  petiole.  Flowers  rather  large,  hermaphrodite,  solitary,  or  in  corymbose 
cymes,  white,  red  or  yellow. 

A considerable  genus,  several  of  the  species  of  which  are  very  variable ; most  abundant  in 
the  north  temperate  zone  of  the  Old  World. — Prof.  Oliver. 

1.  R.  rubiginosa  (glandular  hairs  dull-red),  Linn.  The  well-known 
Sweet  Briar.  A tall  often  dense  scrub,  spreading  by  surculigerus  stems ; prickles 
hooked,  compressed,  with  smaller  straighter  ones  and  glandular  hairs  interspersed. 


530 


XLIV.  ROSACEA. 


iosa. 


Leaflets  elliptical,  doubly  serrate,  hairy,  clothed  beneath  with  rust-coloured 
glands,  from  which  when  bruised  is  emitted  the  peculiar  fragrance  for  which  the 
plant  is  noted.  Sepals  pinnate  and  bristly,  as  well  as  the  peduncles.  Corolla 
pink.  Fruit  scarlet,  ovoid  or  oblong,  bristly  towards  the  base. 

Hab.:  This  European  shrub  has  become  naturalised  between  Stanthorpe  and  the  border  of 
N.  S.  Wales. 


Order  XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


Calyx  free  or  adnate  to  the  ovary,  with  4 or  5 valvate  or  imbricate  lobes  or 
segments.  Petals  as  many  as  calyx-lobes,  valvate  or  imbricate,  sometimes  very 
small  or  wanting.  Stamens  as  many  or  twice  as  many  as  calyx-lobes,  rarely 
fewer  and  very  rarely  indefinite,  inserted  with  the  petals  on  or  outside  a 
perigynous  or  epigynous  disk  or  rarely  hypogynous.  Ovary  more  or  less  adnate 
to  the  calyx,  or  if  free  usually  attached  by  a broad  base,  either  2 to  5 -celled  or 
with  2 to  5 parietal  placentas,  very  rarely  contracted  at  the  base  or  apocarpous ; 
ovules  usually  several,  very  rarely  solitary  in  each  cell  or  to  each  placenta ; styles 
as  many  as  cells  or  placentas,  distinct  or  rarely  united.  Fruit  capsular  or  very 
rarely  succulent  and  indehiscent.  Seeds  usually  small,  with  a copious  albumen 
and  small  or  terete  straight  embryo,  very  rarely  larger  and  without  albumen. — 
Herbs  shrubs  or  trees.  Leaves  alternate  or  opposite,  simple  or  compound,  with 
or  without  stipules.  Flowers  usually  regular  and  hermaphrodite. 

A large  Order,  ranging  over  nearly  the  whole  world,  the  shrubby  or  arborescent  genera  chiefly 
tropical,  the  herbaceous  ones  from  the  more  temperate  or  colder  regions  of  the  northern 
hemisphere,  with  a few  extratropical  southern  genera  or  species.  The  Order  includes  a great 
variety  of  forms,  evidently  connected  with  each  other,  but  difficult  to  unite  by  a common  character 
which  shall  separate  them  from  several  other  Calyciflorous  and  some  Thalamiflorous  Orders 
into  which  they  appear  sometimes  to  pass.  There  is  especially  no  one  character  to  distinguish 
them  from  Rosacea  which  has  not  some  exception,  although  the  greater  number  of  genera  differ 
from  that  Order  in  their  definite  stamens,  united  carpels  with  free  styles,  and  copious 
albumen. — Benth. 


Tribe  I.  Escallonieee. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  alternate,  exstipulate,  simple,  often 
coriaceous  and  glandular-serrate.  Stamens  most  frequently  isomerous  with  the  petals. 


Style  1.  Ovary  3 to  7-merous. 

Petals  imbricate.  Calyx  semisuperior.  Stamens  5.  Ovary  semi-inferior, 

3 to  5-celled 

Petals  valvate. 

Petals  fringed  inside  below  the  middle  with  long  hairs,  forming  a 

corona.  Ovary  inferior  or  semiadnate  . < 

Petals  4 to  5,  free.  Ovary  superior.  Berry  oblong,  indehiscent,  many- 

seeded  

Petals  5 to  7,  deciduous.  Ovary  superior.  Capsule  loculicidal,  4 to  5- 

valved 

Style  1 to  2.  Ovary  2-merous. 

Petals  4,  valvate,  linear.  Ovary  inferior,  1-celled.  Style  simple. 

Berry  1-seeded 

Petals  imbricate.  Stamens  6 to  9.  Ovary  superior,  1-celled  .... 


1, 


2, 


3. 


4, 


5. 

6. 


Quintinia. 

Argophyllum. 

Abrophyllum. 

Cijttsia. 

POLYOSMA. 

Anopterus. 


Tribe  II.  Cunonieae. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  opposite  or  rarely  ternate  or  verticillate, 
stipulate,  simple  or  3 to  5-foliolate  or  imparipinnate.  Stamens  twice  as'many  as  calyx-segments  or 


indefinite.  Styles  free,  at  least  at  the  top. 

Flowers  capitate.  Petals  9.  Carpels  connate.  Flower-head  involucrate. 

Leaves  opposite,  serrate 7.  Callicoma. 

Inflorescence  various,  not  globose-capitate. 

Calyx  4 to  5-partite.  Stamens  4 to  10.  Carpels  in  ovary  2 to  5,  free. 

Leaves  simple 8.  Spir;eanthesidm. 

Calyx  4 to  5-partite,  valvate.  Petals  none.  Stamens  8 to  10,  hypogynous. 

Drupe  2-eelled.  Seeds  compressed,  with  laciniate  margins  ....  9.  Davidsonia. 

Calyx  increasing  after  flowering.  Stamens  8.  Ovary  4-celled.  Leaves 

simple 10-  Aphanopetalum. 

Sepals  5,  valvate.  Petals  5,  inserted  under  the  disk.  Stamens  10.  Ovary 

free,  3-angular,  3-celled.  Leaves  pinnate,  1-foliolate 11.  Gii.lbeea, 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


581 


Calyx  plainly  valvate. 


Petals  small  and  laeiniate  or  none.  Fruit  indehiscent,  surrounded  by 

5 horizontal  wings.  Leaflets  1 to  3,  articulate  on  the  petiole  . . .12.  Ceratopetalum. 

Petals  dentate.  Drupe  1-seeded.  Calyx  reflexed.  Leaves  simple  . . 13.  Schizomeria. 

Stamens  inserted  at  the  base  of  the  disk.  Capsule  2-celled,  many- 
seeded.  Leaves  pinnate 14.  Ackama. 

Calyx  imbricate  or  aestivation  obscure. 

Stamens  inserted  at  the  base  of  the  disk,  free.  Seeds  small,  oblong, 

usually  pilose.  Leaves  various 15.  Weinmannia. 

Sepals  valvate  or  slightly  imbricate.  Stamens  few  or  numerous.  Ovary 
2-celled.  Seeds  not  winged.  Flowers  solitary.  Leaves  3-foliolate 
(leaflets  apparently  in  whorls  of  6) 16.  Bauera. 


1.  QUINTINIA,  Alph.  DC. 

(After  La  Quintinei.) 

Calyx-tube  obconical,  adnate  to  the  ovary,  with  5 persistent  teeth.  Petals  5, 
imbricate,  deciduous.  Stamens  5 ; anthers  ovate.  Ovary  inferior,  3 to  5-celled, 
with  several  ovules  in  each  cell,  the  free  summit  broadly  conical,  tapering  into  a 
persistent  3 to  5-furrowed  style,  with  a capitate  3 to  5-lobed  stigma.  Capsule 
inferior,  opening  at  the  summit  in  teeth  or  valves  continuous  with  the  styles,  which 
separate  up  to  the  stigma.  Seeds  ascending,  long,  spindle-shaped,  with  a loose 
testa  ; embryo  (very  minute  ?)  in  a fleshy  albumen.- — Glabrous  trees  or  shrubs. 
Leaves  alternate,  coriaceous,  without  stipules.  Flowers  small,  white,  in  racemes, 
either  simple  in  the  axils  or  several  forming  a terminal  panicle. 

Besides  the  4 following  species,  which  are  endemic  in  Australia,  there  are  2 in  New  Zealand. 


Racemes  in  a terminal  leafless  panicle 1.  Q.  Sieberi. 

Racemes  paniculate,  terminal.  Flowers  very  small 2.  Q.  Quatrefagesii. 

Racemes  simple,  axillary. 

Petals  pale-yellow 3.  Q.  Verdonii. 

Petals  white 4.  Q.  Faivkneri. 


1.  Q.  Sieberi  (after  F.  W.  Sieber),  A.  DC.  Monogr.  Camp.  90,  and  in  DC. 
Prod.  iv.  5 ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  438.  A spreading  tree  of  30  to  40ft.  Leaves 
oval-elliptical,  shortly  acuminate,  mostly  3 to  4in.  long,  entire,  narrowed  into  a 
petiole  of  about  iin.,  coriaceous,  reticulate.  Racemes  numerous,  in  a terminal 
panicle,  scarcely  longer  than  the  last  leaves.  Pedicels  very  short,  rarely  1 line 
long.  Calyx-lobes  very  short  and  broad.  Petals  oval-oblong,  spreading,  about  2 
lines  long.  Styles  separating  in  the  ripe  capsule  up  to  the  stigmas,  which  remain 
united.  Seeds  obovate  or  oblong,  with  a loose  reticulate  testa,  but  not  winged. — 
Endl.  in  Flora,  1832,  ii.  389,  t.  3,  and  Atakta,  10,  t.  10  (the  plate  wanting  in  our 
copy)  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  126. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 

2.  Q.  Quatrefagesii  (after  Professor  J.  L.  A.  de  Quatrefages),  F.  v.  M. 
Viet.  Nat.  1891.  Viscidulous ; leaves  from  lanceolate  to  rhomboid-ovate,  short- 
acuminate,  with  no  perceptible  denticulations,  dark-green  above,  pale-brownish 
beneath,  and  there  the  costular  primary  venules  prominent,  the  secondary 
venules  on  both  sides  concealed.  Racemes  amply  paniculate  ; flowers  particularly 
small,  on  short  pedicels ; calyx-tube  angularly  5-lined.  Calyx-lobes  deltoid, 
minute.  Petals  deltoid-semielliptic,  ciliolar-barellate  inside  at  the  base.  Stamens 
somewhat  hairy ; filaments  about  half  as  long  as  the  anthers.  Styles  3 or  4, 
united,  very  short,  but  comparatively  thick.  Disk  expanded,  slightly  undulate, 
glabrous.  Stigmas  hardly  turgid.  Ovary  3 or  4-celled. 

Hab.:  On  the  summit  of  Mt.  Bartle  Frere,  Stephen  Johnson  (F.  v.  M.) 

This  species  agrees  with  Q.  Sieberi  in  its  inflorescence,  although  the  flowers  are  even 
smaller  than  those  of  Q.  Faivkneri , while  the  leaves  are  more  like  those  of  Q.  Verdonii,  but 
singularly  remarkable  for  their  brownish  tinge  on  the  under  side,  where  the  dark  costular  but 


532 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


[Quint  inia. 


almost  straight  primary  venulation  becomes  very  conspicuous  in  the  absence  of  secondary  well- 
visible  venules  ; as  regards  the  proportionate  length  of  the  stigmas  to  the  styles,  this  plant 
differs  from  the  other  known  species.  The  leaves  remind  of  those  of  some  Fagus ; they  are 
broad  in  comparison  to  their  length.  Ripe  fruit  not  yet  available  for  examination. — F.  v.  M. 

3.  Q.  Verdonii  (after  Sir  George  Verdon),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  125,  vi.  189  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  438.  Small  tree  with  spreading  branches.  Very  near  Q. 
Sieberi,  the  leaves  of  the  same  shape  and  size,  hut  much  less  reticulate.  Racemes 
in  the  specimens  seen  all  simple  and  solitary  in  the  upper  axils,  3 to  4in.  long. 
Flowers  pale-yellow,  rather  smaller  than  in  Q.  Sieberi,  on  pedicels  about  2 lines 
long.  Calyx-lobes  narrower,  about  half  as  long  as  the  petals.  Capsule  smaller 
than  in  Q.  Sieberi.  Seeds  small,  ovoid-oblong,  obtuse,  not  winged. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 

4.  Q.  Fawkneri  (after  John  Pascoe  Fawkner),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  vi.  92. 
A tree  of  about  60ft.  in  height,  with  a white  smooth  bark.  Branchlets  angular 
by  the  prominent  decurrent  raised  lines  from  the  base  of  the  petioles.  Leaves 
li  to  2^in.  long  and  about  i to  fin.  broad,  cuneate-oblong,  apex  retuse  or 
emarginate ; the  margins  narrowly  recurved,  quite  entire,  silvery-hoary  on  the 
under  surface  and  dotted  with  brownish  resinous  dots,  the  veins  inconspicuous. 
Petioles  short.  Racemes  axillary,  2 to  3in.  long,  very  resinous,  nearly  glabrous  ; 
rhachis  angular,  furfuraceous.  Pedicels  1 to  2 lines  long.  Bracts  at  the  base  of 
the  pedicels  cordate-semiovate,  at  length  deciduous,  scarcely  £ line  long.  Calyx 
scarcely  1 line  long.  Petals  white,  oblong-ovate,  cuneate  to  2 lines  long. 
Filaments  linear-subulate,  1 line  long  ; expanded  anther  cordate-ovate,  f line 
long.  Style  somewhat  thick,  cylindric,  IV  line  long ; stigmas  patently  recurved. — 
F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallachy  (F.  v.  M.);  Bartle  Frere,  Bellenden  Ker  Expedition,  1889. 


2.  ARGOPHYLLUM,  Forst. 

(Silvery-white  under  side  of  leaf.) 

Calyx-tube  shortly  turbinate  or  hemispherical,  adnate  to  the  ovary  ; lobes  5 or 
6,  persistent.  Petals  as  many,  valvate,  persistent,  fringed  inside  below  the  middle 
with  long  hairs,  forming  a corona.  Stamens  as  many  as  petals  ; anthers  usually 
shorter  than  the  filaments.  Disk  scarcely  prominent.  Ovary  half-adnate,  2 to 
5-celled,  with  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell  ; style  shortly  conical,  with  a capitate 
shortly  lobed  stigma.  Capsule  small,  coriaceous,  2 to  5-celled,  opening  loculi- 
cidally  and  sometimes  also  septieidally  into  as  many  or  twice  as  many  valves  or 
cells.  Seeds  minute,  globular,  reticulate.  Embryo  minute  in  a fleshy  albumen. 


— Shrubs.  Leaves  alternate,  usually  white  underneath.  Flowers  small,  in 

terminal  or  axillary  corymbose  panicles. 

Leaves  6 to  even  9in.  long,  membranous,  serrate 1.  A.  Lejourdanii. 

Leaves  2 to  4in.  long,  entire  or  somewhat  serrate 2.  A.  nitidum. 


1.  A.  Lejourdanii  (after  M.  Lejourdan),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm  iv.  33  ; Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  437.  An  elegant  shrub  of  6 to  7ft.,  the  branches  and  inflorescence 
clothed  with  a close  silky-white  or  reddish  tomentum.  Leaves  ovate,  acuminate, 
serrate,  mostly  5 to  6in.  long,  on  a petiole  of  about  lin.,  not  coriaceous,  green 
and  glabrous,  or  with  scattered  hairs  above,  silvery-white  with  a close  silky 
tomentum  underneath,  the  pinnate  parallel  primary  veins  erecto-patent,  about  DO 
on  each  side  of  the  midrib,  the  transverse  secondary  ones  and  smaller  reticula- 
tions prominent  underneath.  Panicles  axillary  in  the  upper  axils,  shorter  than 
the  leaves,  corymbose  or  more  frequently  ovate.  Flowers,  including  the  small 
expanded  petals,  about  3 lines  diameter.  Capsule  depressed-globular,  about  2 
lines  diameter,  usually  2-celled  and  4-valved,  rarely  3-celled  and  6-valved. 


Argophyllum.\ 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


533 


Hab.:  Mount  Elliott,  Ballacliy ; Walsh’s  Pyramid. 

Wood  yellow,  close-grained,  and  hard. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  151a  (Mount  Perry  form). 
Var.  cryptophleba,  F.  v.  M.  in  Herb.  Leaves  lanceolate,  about  6in.  long  and  1J  to  2in.  broad, 
or  sometimes  more  oblong  in  form  and  9in.  long  and  5in.  broad,  the  texture  of  these  large  leaves 
being  almost  membranous ; the  margins  bordered  with  numerous  sharp,  short  teeth. 
Hab.:  Mulgrave  River,  Bellenden  Ker  Exped.  1889. 

2.  A.  nitidum  (shining),  Forst.  Char.  Gen.  30,  t.  15.  A shrub  or  small 
tree.  Branches  erect,  terete,  silky-tomentose.  Leaves  ovate,  narrowed  at  both 
ends,  2 to  4in.  long,  undulate,  entire  or  somewhat  serrate,  above  greenish-brown, 
beneath  like  the  petioles ; panicles  and  calyxes  shining  silky-white,  the  young  ones 
somewhat  fulvous.  Inflorescence  paniculate  towards  the  top  of  the  branches,  the 
common  peduncle  elongated,  axillary.  Flowers  5 rarely  6-merous,  the  petals 
much  longer  than  the  calyx.  Capsule  obovate,  generally  3-celled  and  3-valved. 
Seeds  numerous. — Grertn.  Fruct.  t.  210;  Labill.  FI.  Nov.  Caled.  38,  t.  40;  DC. 
Prod.  vii.  578. 

Hab.:  Mount  Perry,  Jas.  Keys;  Logan  River,  Rev.  B.  Scortechini. 

Var.  fulva.  Branches  and  leaf-veins  rusty-coloured ; leaves  smaller,  ovate-lanceolate. 
Hab  : Mount  Bellenden  Ker  (a  tree  up  to  25ft.),  TP.  A.  Sayer ; Mount  Bartle  Frere,  S.  Johnson. 
The  species  is  also  in  New  Caledonia. 


3.  ABROPHYLLUM,  Hook.  f. 

(From  beauty  of  leaf.) 

(Brachynema,  F.  v.  M.) 

Calyx-tube  exceedingly  short,  adnate  to  the  broad  base  of  the  ovary  ; segments 
5,  spreading,  deciduous.  Petals  5,  valvate,  spreading,  deciduous.  Stamens  5 ; 
anthers  large,  on  very  short  filaments.  Ovary  free,  except  the  broad  base,  oblong, 
5-furrowed,  5-celled,  with  many  ovules  in  each  cell ; stigma  sessile,  5-lobed. 
Berry  free,  ovoid,  5-celled.  Seeds  numerous,  small,  nearly  globular  ; embryo 
(minute  ?)  in  a fleshy  albumen. — Shrub.  Leaves  alternate.  Flowers  in  corym- 
bose panicles,  terminal  or  in  the  upper  axils. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species,  endemic  in  Australia. 

1.  A.  ornans  (beautiful  leaves),  Hook.  f.  ms.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  437.  A 
tall  handsome  shrub  or  small  tree,  with  a smooth  bark,  the  young  shoots  and 
inflorescence  pubescent  with  short  appressed  hairs.  Leaves  elliptical  or  ovate- 
lanceolate,  acuminate,  6 to  9in.  long,  with  a few  short  broad  mucronate  teeth  in 
the  upper  part,  narrowed  at  the  base  into  a petiole  of  1 to  2in.,  thin  and  glabrous 
or  sprinkled  with  a few  appressed  hairs  on  the  principal  veins  underneath. 
Panicles  irregularly  dichotomous,  much  shorter  than  the  leaves.  Flowers  rather 
small,  yellowish.  Calyx-segments  triangular-lanceolate,  about  ^ line  long.  Petals 
about  2 lines  long.  Berries  3 to  4 lines. — Brachynema  ornans,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm. 
iii.  90 ; Habrophyllum  ornans,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  vii.  150. 

Hab.:  From  Brisbane  River  to  Rockingham  Bay,  Mt.  Wheeler,  F.  v.  M.  Flowering  in  October. 

Dr.  Hooker  had  described  the  genus  for  the  “Genera  Plantarum  ” when  the  specimen  and 
character  arrived  from  F.  v.  Mueller,  whose  specific  name  he  consequently  adopted,  but  the 
generic  name  was  preoccupied  by  a curious  Brazilian  genus  allied  to  Ehenacece,  described  and 
figured  in  the  “ Linnsean  Transactions,”  xxii.  126,  t.  22. — Bentli. 


4.  CUTTSIA,  F.  v.  M. 

(After  J.  Cutts.) 

Calyx  5 to  7-partite,  segments  narrow,  semilanceolate,  deciduous.  Petals  5 to 
7,  lanceolate,  the  base  truncate,  sessile,  valvate,  deciduous.  Stamens  5 to  7, 
almost  hypogynous,  opposite  the  calyx-segments,  alternate  with  the  petals. 


534 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


[Cuttsia. 


Filaments  free,  linear-setaceous.  Anthers  cordate-ovate,  introrse,  2-celled,  dorsi- 
fixed ; cells  dehiscing  longitudinally.  Style  short,  simple,  stigma  depressed- 
globular,  slightly  4 or  5 crenulate-lobed.  Disk  small,  entire,  connate  with  the 
base  of  the  calyx.  Ovary  4 to  5 -celled,  superior,  many-ovulate,  affixed  in  the 
axils  of  the  placentas.  Capsule  superior,  4 to  5-celled.  Seeds  minute,  wingless. — 
A tall  shrub  or  small  tree.  Leaves  alternate,  without  stipules,  lanceolate,  serrate, 
thin  chartaceous.  Panicles  terminal,  the  branches  corymbose  ; flowers  white, 
capsules  minute. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  47,  t.  40. 

1.  C.  viburnea  (Viburnum-like),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  l.c.  Branches  terete  and 
as  well  as  the  petioles  and  leaves  glabrous.  Leaves  like  those  of  Abrophyllum,  4 
to  8in.  long,  1 to  2in.  broad,  penninerved,  the  reticulation  of  thin  veins,  apex 
acuminate  marginal,  rather  large  and  distant,  tapering  at  the  base  to  a petiole  of 
about  lin.  Panicle  ample,  the  pedicels,  bracts,  and  calyxes  shortly  pilose.  Bracts 
solitary,  narrow  semilanceolate,  scarcely  over  1 line  long.  Calyx  1 line  long, 
deeply  divided.  Petals  glabrous,  14  to  2 lines  long.  Filaments  a little  over  1 
line  long,  glabrous  ; anthers  | line  long.  Style  scarcely  f line  long,  glabrous, 
persistent.  Stigma  ^ line  broad.  Ovary  glabrous  ; capsule  globose-ovate,  some- 
what hard,  2 lines  high,  valvate  to  the  middle.  Seeds  almost  J line  long,  brown, 
ovate,  very  slightly  tessellately-punctate. 

Hab.:  Mountain  creeks  in  southern  Queensland. 

Wood  white,  close-grained,  and  very  tough. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  152a. 


5.  POLYOSMA,  Blume. 

(Very  fragrant ; flowers.) 

Calyx-tube  ovoid,  adnate  to  the  ovary,  the  limb  small,  4-toothed,  persistent. 
Petals  4,  valvate,  linear,  erect  and  frequently  cohering  in  a tube,  spreading  at  the 
end,  deciduous.  Stamens  4 ; anthers  linear,  erect.  Ovary  inferior,  1 -celled, 
with  numerous  ovules  attached  to  2 parietal  placentas,  protruding  far  into  the 
cavity  and  almost  dividing  it  into  2 cells  ; style  filiform,  with  an  entire  terminal 
stigma.  Berry  ovoid,  inferior,  with  a single  large  erect  seed  ; testa  rather  thick  ; 
embi’yo  small,  in  the  summit  of  a fleshy  albumen. — Trees.  Leaves  opposite  or 
nearly  so,  usually  turning  black  in  drying.  Flowers  white  or  greenish,  in 
terminal  simple  racemes. 

Besides  the  Australian  species,  which  is  endemic,  the  genus  comprises  several  from  E.  India, 
the  Archipelago,  and  S.  Pacific  Islands. — Benth. 

Nearly  or  quite  glabrous. 

Leaves  thin-coriaceous,  3 to  4in.  long,  irregularly  notched  with  callous 
teeth,  some  longer  and  almost  bristle-like ; petioles  short.  Fruit 
compressed,  6 to  9 lines  long,  4 to  5 lines  broad  about  the  centre, 
black,  on  pedicels  of  about  2 lines 1.  P.  Cunnmghamii. 

Leaves  thick-coriaceous,  minutely  and  distantly  toothed,  teeth  with 
callous  tips,  2 to  3in.  long,  on  petioles  about  2 lines  long.  Fruit 
ribbed,  broad  at  the  base,  about  4 lines  long,  on  pedicels  of  4 lines  . . 2.  P.  rigidiusculu. 

Leaves  narrow-lanceolate,  with  long  acuminate  points,  entire,  1J  to  2Jin. 
long ; petioles  3 to  4 lines  long.  Fruit  smooth,  about  2£  lines  long, 
the  capsule  protruding  from  the  calyx-tube,  on  pedicels  of  about  2 lines  3.  P.  reducta. 
Hirsute.  Leaves  entire  or  with  a few  distant  obscure  teeth,  3 to  5£in. 

long,  J to  2£in.  broad,  on  petioles  of  1 to  l^in.  Fruit  globose-rostrate, 

4 lines  long,~3£  lines  diameter,  reddish,  marked  with  short  whitish  lines  4.  P.  alaiujiacea. 

1.  P.  Cunninghamii  (after  A.  Cunningham),  J.  J.  Benn.  PI.  Jav.  Pear. 
196;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  488.  A tree  said  to  attain  the  height  of  80ft.  but 
usually  much  smaller,  quite  glabrous  except  the  inflorescence  and  flowers.  Leaves 
ovate-elliptical,  acuminate  acute  or  rarely  obtuse,  3 to  4in.  long,  irregularly 
notched  with  callous  teeth,  much  narrowed  into  a short  petiole,  somewhat 
coriaceous,  penniveined.  Racemes  usually  shorter  than  the  leaves.  Pedicels  1 to 


Poh/osrrisx  rujuiijxscJjJ.ay,Fv T/T ^Ba£U. 

MUt  -p  c J Yilla. 

Jinrbans..  </' 


Pl.XX. 


Polyosma .] 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


535 


2 lines  long,  with  2 minute  bracteoles  under  the  ovary.  Calyx-teeth  small. 
Corolla  about  5 lines  long,  slightly  pubescent  outside  with  appressed  hairs,  the 
petals  remaining  long  coherent  in  a narrow  tube.  Fruit  ovoid,  fin.  long,  black 
and  fluted,  crowned  by  the  small  persistent  cup-shaped  calyx-limb. 

Hab.:  Scrubs  North  Coast  Railway.  Fruit  ripe  in  March, 

2.  P.  rigidiuscula  (leaves  somewhat  rigid),  F.  v.  M.  et  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  i. 
A straggling  shrub,  the  leaves  so  far  as  known  (only  two  small  specimens 
obtained)  2 to  3in.  long,  broad-lanceolate  to  ovate,  the  margins  minutely  and 
distantly  denticulated  with  callous  often  pointed  teeth  or  almost  entire,  usually 
acuminate,  soon  glabrous,  rather  conspicuously  reticular-venulated,  shining  above, 
paler  green  beneath.  Racemes  spike-like,  shorter  than  the  leaves.  (Flowers  not 
seen.)  Fruits  ovate-ellipsoid,  about  4 lines  long,  slightly  hairy  and  nearly  sessile. 
Seed  turgid-ovate,  its  testule  smooth,  membranous,  brownish-grey ; fresh  albumen 
carnulent,  embryo  inconspicuous. 

Hab.:  Summit  of  Mt.  Bartle  Frere,  Bellenden  Ker  Expedition , August,  1889. 

3.  P.  reducta  (referring  to  venulation),  F.  v.  M.  Viet.  Nat.,  June  1892.  A 
small  tree  of  about  25ft.  in  height,  with  appressed  hairs  on  the  branchlets  and 
petioles.  Leaves  mostly  lanceolate,  entire,  gradually  acuminate,  from  If  to  2fin. 
long,  almost  suddenly  passing  into  the  slender  petiole,  nearly  glabrous  above, 
slightly  puberulous  beneath,  the  venulation  much  concealed.  Racemes  terminal 
and  oftener  axillary ; pedicels  very  slender.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  minute  at  the 
upper  end  of  the  pedicel.  Calyx-teeth  very  short.  Fruit  ovate-globular,  slightly 
oblique,  without  longitudinal  lines,  its  summit  emerging  from  the  calyx  and  some- 
what pyramidal,  about  2f  lines  long,  on  pedicels  of  about  the  same  length ; endo- 
carp  thinly  cartilaginous,  the  spurious  dissepiment  longitudinally  divisible  into 
halves.  Seeds  1 or  2,  if  2 only  one  side  turgid.  Albumen  oily,  somewhat 
granular.  Embryo  minute,  roundish. 

Hab.:  Russell  River,  W.  Sayer  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 

4.  P.  alangiacea  (Alangium-like),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  viii.  8.  A tree 
about  30ft.  high.  Leaves  lanceolate,  entire,  almost  glabrous,  3 to  5in.  long,  1 to 
lfin.  broad,  at  first  slightly  tomentose,  of  a paler  green  on  the  under  side  and 
scarcely  glossy,  thin  coriaceous,  the  lateral  nerves  erecto-patent,  margins  ciliolate. 
Racemes  terminal,  solitary,  3 to  5in.  long,  shortly  pedunculate.  Flowers 
numerous,  4 or  5-merous.  Pedicels  solitary.  Bracteoles  linear  or  ovate-lanceolate, 
about  1 line  long.  Corolla  4 to  5 lines  long,  thinly  pilose.  Filaments  scarcely 
exceeding  2 lines.  Anthers  twice  as  long,  narrow  oblong-linear,  obtuse.  Style 
3 lines  long,  filiform,  very  thinly  coriaceous.  Stigma  depressed,  very  shortly 
2-lobed. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallachy  (F.  v.  M.) 


G.  ANOPTERUS,  Labill. 

(From  ano,  upwards,  and  pteron,  a wing  ; wing  of  seed.) 

Calyx-tube  very  short,  adnate  to  the  broad  base  of  the  ovary ; lobes  6 to  9, 
short,  persistent.  Petals  as  many  as  calyx-lobes,  imbricate,  spreading,  deciduous. 
Stamens  as  many  as  petals  ; anthers  versatile.  Ovary  free,  except  the  broad 
base,  1-celled,  with  several  ovules  attached  to  2 parietal  placentas ; style  2-lobed, 
the  lobes  stigmatic  along  the  inner  side.  Capsule  oblong-conical,  thickly 
coriaceous,  opening  in  2 recurved  valves  with  the  placentas  on  their  margins. 
Seeds  pendulous,  imbricate,  flattened ; testa  membranous,  dilated  at  the  hilum 
end  into  a broad  membranous  wing,  the  nucleus  at  the  opposite  end  small, 


Part  II.  P 


586 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


[Anopterus. 


oblong  ; embryo  minute,  in  a fleshy  albumen. — Shrubs  or  small  trees,  quite 
glabrous.  Leaves  alternate,  evergreen,  coriaceous,  without  stipules.  Flowers 
white,  rather  large,  in  short  terminal  racemes. 

The  genus  is  endemic  in  Australia. 

1.  A.  IVEacleayanus  (after  Sir  Wm.  Macleay),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Pharm. 
Soc.  Viet.  1859 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  489.  A tree  attaining  a height  of  50ft. 
(Moore).  Leaves  usually  elliptical-lanceolate,  acuminate,  very  large,  obtusely 
serrate,  narrowed  into  petioles  of  f to  lin.  Calyx-lobes  petals  and  stamens  often 
8 or  9 each.  Capsule  from  1 to  lfin.  long,  seeds  f to  fin.,  including  the  wing. 
Hal).:  Mount  Lindsay,  at  an  elevation  of  4000  to  5000ft.,  IV.  Hill. 

7.  CALLICOMA,  Andr, 

(Referring  to  the  beauty  of  flower-heads.) 

(Calycomis,  It.  Br.) 

Sepals  4 or  5,  free,  valvate  or  the  margins  slightly  imbricate.  Petals  none. 
Stamens  twice  as  many  as  sepals,  hypogynous  ; anthers  ovate,  versatile.  Ovary 
2-celled  or  rarely  3-celled,  with  several  pendulous  ovules  in  each  ; styles  distinct, 
filiform,  each  with  a minute  terminal  stigma.  Capsule  small,  separating  into 
distinct  carpels  opening  along  the  inner  edge.  Seeds  small,  ovoid-oblong, 
tuberculate  ; embryo  very  small,  in  a somewhat  fleshy  albumen. — Trees  or  shrubs. 
Leaves  opposite,  simple.  Flowers  small,  in  dense  globular  heads. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  two  species,  endemic  in  Australia. 

Leaves  prominently  toothed,  with  minute,  obtuse  teeth.  Petals  very  minute. 


Leaves  coarsely  serrate.  Flowers  in  globular  heads 1 . C.  serratifolia. 

Leaves  minutely  serrate.  Flowers  paniculate 2.  C.  Stutzeri. 


1.  C.  serratifolia  (leaves  serrated),  Andr.  Bot.  Bep.  t.  566  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  440.  A tall  shrub,  growing  into  a tree  of  80  to  40ft.,  the  young  shoots 
often  tomentose  or  villous,  the  branches  soon  glabrous.  Leaves  from  elliptical- 
oblong  to  ovate-lanceolate,  shortly  acuminate,  coarsely  serrate,  2 to  4in.  long, 
coriaceous,  glabrous  and  shining  above,  either  white  underneath  with  a minute 
tomentum,  or  softly  tomentose  or  villous  and  more  rust-coloured,  the  parallel 
pinnate  veins  prominent  underneath.  Stipules  ovate,  very  deciduous.  Flowers 
numerous,  in  dense  globular  heads  on  peduncles  of  f to  lin.,  of  which  2 to  4 are 
usually  on  a short  common  peduncle  in  the  upper  axils,  and  several  form  a 
terminal  cluster  or  short  panicle.  Sepals  and  capsules  not  above  If  line  long, 
tomentose  or  villous.  Stamens  8 to  15,  more  than  twice  as  long. — DC.  Prod.  iv. 
7 ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  1811  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1167. 

Hab.:  Glasshouse  Mountains. 

C.  ferruginea,  D.  Don,  Cunon.  11,  in  Edinb.  New  Phil.  Journ.  Apr.  to  June,  1830,  with  the 
leaves  softly  rusty-tomentose  or  villous  underneath,  passes  into  the  common  forms  by  every 
gradation. — Benth. 

2.  C.  Stutzeri  (after  John  Stutzer),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  31.  A tree  40ft. 
or  more  high  ; branchlets  and  petioles  shortly  pubescent.  Leaves  opposite, 
minutely  dentate,  4 to  8in.  long,  If  to  3in.  broad,  lanceolate-ovate,  very  shortly 
acuminate,  remotely  penninerved,  reticulations  copious,  glabrous.  Stipules 
lanceolate,  quite  entire,  slightly  pubescent  on  the  underside.  Peduncles  1 to  3 in 
each  axil,  f to  If  in.  long,  secondary  ones  opposite  or  vertic'llate  or  umbellate,  few 
flowers  or  here  and  there  many  flowers  in  each  head.  Bracts  and  bracteoles 
orbicular  or  cuneate  ovate,  about  1 line  long.  Calyx  shortly  pubescent,  If  line 
long,  deeply  divided  into  5,  rarely  4 or  6 lobes.  Cuneate-obovate,  membranous, 
slightly  imbricate.  Petals  very  minute,  cuneate-quadrate,  scale-like,  scarcely 
exceeding  1 line  long,  brown,  glabrous,  emarginate,  hence  thickened  and 


Callicoma.] 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


587 


bifoveolate.  Stamens  9 to  10,  opposite  the  sepals,  alternate  with  the  petals. 
Anthers  exappendiculate,  dorsifixed,  nearly  ^ line  long.  Styles  2,  free,  setaceous, 
stigma  terminal,  very  small,  glabrous,  almost  2 lines  long.  Ovary  hoary- 
velvety,  semisuperior,  septicidal,  2-celled,  ovules  few. — F.  v.  M.,  l.c. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallacliy. 


8.  SPIRSANTHEMUM,  A.  Gray. 

(Flowers  somewhat  resembling  those  of  Spircea.) 

Flowers  hermaphrodite  or  polygamo-dioecious,  calyx-tube  short,  free,  the  limb 
4 to  5-parted ; lobes  ovate-triangular,  persistent,  valvate.  Petals  none.  Stamens 
4 to  5 or  twice  that  number,  inserted  at  the  base  of  the  calyx,  nearly  hypogynous, 
long  as  the  calyx  ; filaments  filiform  ; anthers  didymous.  The  hypogynous 
glands  between  the  stamens  and  the  ovary,  8 to  10,  linear.  Carpels  in 

the  male  flowers  none,  in  the  female  flowers  4 or  5,  rarely  2 or  3,  free, 
oblong-ovoid,  very  much  attenuated,  style  stigmatose  at  the  apex  ; ovules  1 to  5 
or  numerous,  2-serrate.  Follicles  2 to  5,  twice  the  length  of  calyx,  compressed, 
dehiscent  inwards,  1 or  2-seeded.  Seeds  oblong,  compressed.  Testa  winged 
above  or  on  both  sides,  embryo  sub-cylindrical,  albuminous. — Shrubs  or  small 
trees  with  terete  branchlets.  Leaves  opposite  or  verticillate,  petiolate,  simple, 
oval  or  oblong,  entire  or  serrate.  Stipules  deciduous.  Flowers  numerous, 
disposed  in  axillary  panicles,  small,  on  articulate  pedicels. — B.  and  H.,  Gen.  PI. 
i.  650. 

1.  S.  Davidsonii  (after  Alex.  Davidson),  F.  v.  M.,  Austr.  Journ.  of  Phar., 
March  1887.  A spreading-headed  tree  with  slender  stem,  about  25ft.  in  height, 
the  branchlets  glabrescent.  Leaves  opposite,  on  rather  long  petioles,  glabrous  on 
both  sides,  prominently  costate-nerved  beneath,  foveolate  at  the  axils  of  the 
nerves.  Panicles  terminal,  erect,  ample.  Flowers  numerous,  pinkish-white ; 
peduncles  and  pedicels  slightly  downy.  Segments  of  the  calyx  ovate-lanceolate, 
glabrous,  stamen  exserted,  twice  as  many  as  divisions  of  the  calyx ; hypogynous 
scales  very  minute.  Follicles  2 to  3,  considerably  longer  than  the  calyx.  Seeds 
with  a terminal  appendage. — F.  v.  M.,  1 c. 

Hab.:  On  the  highest  crest  of  one  of  the  mountains  of  the  Bellenden  Ker  Range,  Sayer  and 
Davidson  (F.  v.  M.) 

Baron  Mueller  also  notes  that  this  species  is  closely  allied  to  S.  samoense,  but  that  plant,  so 
far  as  known,  differs  in  its  leaves  being  more  rounded,  copiously  dentate,  a closer  nervature, 
shorter  stamens  and  styles,  as  well  as  in  its  greater  number  of  carpels.  From  S.  vitiense  our 
plant  is  separated  by  always  simply  opposite  leaves,  terminal  inflorescence,  longer  pedicels, 
larger  flowers,  much  exserted  stamens  and  carpels,  not  several  times  longer  than  the  calyx. 
S.  Macgillivrayi , from  the  New  Hebrides,  is  as  yet  imperfectly  known,  but  the  leaves  are 
described  as  serrate  and  the  flowers  as  always  tetramerous.  S.  Graefferi  and  S.  Katakata,  from 
Fiji,  are  also  allied  but  not  identical.  The  New  Caledonian  congeners  are  still  more  distinct. 

9.  DAVIDSONIA,  F.  v.  M. 

(After  J.  E.  Davidson.) 

Calyx  4 to  5-fid,  {estivation  valvate.  Petals  none.  Stamens  8 to  10,  hypogy- 
nous. Filaments  free,  setaceous.  Anthers  dorsifixed,  oblong,  2-celled,  dehiscing 
longitudinally.  Styles  2,  setaceous,  free.  Stigmas  very  small,  terminal.  Berry 
oblong-oval,  2J  to  3in.  long,  2 to  2Jin.  diameter.  Epicarp  purple,  but  covered 
by  a loose  covering  of  short  brown  hairs  ; pulp  deep-red,  very  juicy.  Seeds 
usually  2,  flattish,  about  8 or  9 lines  broad,  bordered  by  a rather  deep  irregularly 
laciniate  wing,  exalbuminous.  Cotyledons  plano-convex,  straight,  ovate.  Radicle 
very  short,  superior. — Small  erect  trees  with  large  very  irregularly  toothed  impari- 
pinnate  stipulate  leaves,  young  growth  more  or  less  hairy. — F.  v,  M.  Fragm. 
vi.  4. 


588 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


[David  snnia . 


1.  D.  pruriens  (referring  to  the  prickly  hairs  covering  fruit,  &c.),  F.  v.  M. 
Fraiiin.  vi.  4,  pi.  46.  “ Oo-ray,”  Tally  River,  J.  F.  Bailey.  A tree  attaining 

the  height  of  80  or  40ft.  Leaves  18in.  or  more  long,  the  rhachis  bordered  with 
more  or  less  broad  lobes  or  teeth,  the  end  leaflets  often  exceeding  1ft.  long  and 
Bin.  broad,  the  lower  ones  more  or  less  abbreviated  and  often  decurrent,  all 
coriaceous,  ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate,  sharply  and  irregularly  dentate,  the 
rhachis  like  the  young  shoots  and  panicles  clothed  with  irritable  hairs.  Panicles 
pendulous,  lft.  or  more  long  ; flowers  clustered  on  the  short  branches.  Bracts 
and  bracteoles  small,  lanceolate  or  linear-subulate.  Calyx  reddish,  lobes  2 or  3 
lines  long.  Filaments  1A  to  2 lines  long,  glabrous.  Style  about  2 lines  long. 
Fruit  a juicy  drupe-like  berry  covered  by  a loose  thin  coating  of  short  brown 
hairs ; skin  plum-colour,  pulp  a rich  red.  Seeds  flat  with  laciniated  border.— 
Ql.  Agri.  Journ.  ii.  pi.  37,  fruit  natural  size  (coloured). 

Hab.:  Most  of  the  tropical  scrubs. 

Fruit  used  for  jam -making. 

Wood  of  a dark-brown,  close-grained,  hard,  tough  and  durable ; useful  for  tool-handles  and 
mallets. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  I Foods,  No.  154. 

Var.  Jerseyana.  (D.  Jersey  ana,  F.  v.  M)  This  principally  differs  from  the  northern  plant 
in  being  smaller  in  all  its  parts.  Hab.:  Towards  Tweed  River. 

10.  APHANOPETALUM,  Endl. 

(Petals  obscure.) 

(Platyptelea,  J.  Drumm.) 

Calyx-tube  very  short,  adnate  to  the  broad  base  of  the  ovary  ; lobes  4,  slightly 
imbricate,  2 opposite  ones  rather  larger  than  the  other  2,  persistent  and  enlarged 
after  flowering.  Petals  none  or  very  minute.  Stamens  8 ; filaments  short, 
anthers  oblong,  2-lobed  at  the  base.  Ovary  4-furrowed,  4-celled,  with  1 pendulous 
ovule  in  each  cell,  tapering  into  4 more  or  less  united  styles,  shortly  divergent  at 
the  top ; stigmas  terminal.  Fruit  hard,  small,  indehiscent,  surrounded  at  the 
base  by  the  horizontally  spreading  wing-like  enlarged  calyx-segments.  Seed 
solitary,  reniform  or  horseshoe-shaped,  rugose.  Embryo  curved,  in  the  axis  of 
the  fleshy  albumen. — Shrubs  or  trees,  with  weak  or  twining  branches,  quite 
glabrous.  Leaves  opposite,  simple.  Stipules  minute  or  none.  Flowers  few  in 
short  cymes  or  leafy  panicles,  or  solitary  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  is  nearly  allied  to  Ceratopetalum  in  character,  and 
especially  in  the  fruit,  but  with  a very  different  habit. — Benth. 

1.  A.  resinosum  (bearing  resinous  dots),  Endl.  Nov.  Stirp.  Dec.  35,  and 
Iconoyr.  t.  26  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  441.  A tall  straggling  or  climbing  shrub,  quite 
glabrous,  the  smaller  branches  scabrous  with  raised  resinous  dots.  Leaves  ovate 
lanceolate  or  elliptical,  obtuse  or  scarcely  acuminate,  obtusely  serrate,  1A  to  3in. 
long,  acute  at  the  base,  on  a petiole  of  1 to  3 lines,  thinly  coriaceous,  smooth  and 
shining.  Peduncles  axillary,  sometimes  3-flowered,  the  central  pedicel  without 
bracteoles,  the  2 lateral  ones  bracteolate,  or  all  bracteolate  and  an  additional  pair 
lower  down,  or  the  inflorescence  further  developed  into  a short  dense  more  or  less 
leafy  panicle.  Calyx-lobes  at  first  small,  but  soon  enlarging,  and  under  the  ripe 
fruit  oblong-lanceolate,  obtuse,  about  Ain.  long.  Petals,  when  present,  quite 
microscopic.  Fruit  without  the  wings  scarcely  1A  line  diameter. — F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  i.  228. 

Hab.:  River  scrubs  of  southern  Queensland.  Flowering  about  September. 


11.  GILLBEEA,  F.  v.  M. 

(After  Dr.  Win.  Gillbee.) 

Calyx  5-partite,  {estivation  valvate.  Petals  5,  shorter  than  the  calyx,  with 
biglandular  appendage  at  the  apex.  Stamens  10,  free,  inserted  on  the  hypo- 
gvnous  annular  disk.  Filaments  linear-setaceous.  Anthers  almost  globose, 


Gillbeea.] 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


539 


dorsifixed,  2-celled,  without  appendages,  cells  longitudinally  dehiscing.  Styles 
free,  3,  short,  filiform.  Stigma  very  minute.  Ovary  3-winged,  3-celled,  cells 
2-ovulate,  ovules  pendulous. — Tree.  Leaves  impari-pinnate  or  sometimes  the 
upper  ones  trifoliolate  or  simple  ; leaflets  large,  almost  ovate,  minutely  denticu- 
late. Flowers  white  in  broad  panicles. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  17. 

1.  G.  adenopetala  (petals  bearing  glands),  F.  v.  M.  lx.  and  Fragm.  vi.  188. 
A tree,  said  to  attain  the  height  of  GOft.,  but  flowering  often  as  a shrub  ; bark 
smooth,  branches  glabrous  and  somewhat  terete.  The  petioles  and  leaf  rhachis 
hirsute.  Leaves  1 to  3-jugate  ; leaflets  chartaceous,  3 to  6in.  long,  1£  to  2Jin. 
broad,  ending  in  a short  point,  lateral  nerves  erecto-patent,  pilose  beneath. 
Reticulation  copious,  both  sides  shining.  Stipules  caducous.  Peduncles 
terminal,  bearing  branched  panicles.  Pedicels  short.  Bracteoles  cymbiform- 
lanceolate,  soon  falling,  almost  1 line  long.  Calyx  about  2-|  lines  long,  the 
segments  almost  lanceolate-bisulcate  on  the  back.  Petals  membranous,  glabrous, 
or  slightly  ciliate,  about  1 line  long,  laciniate  at  the  end  and  glandular.  Fila- 
ments about  1 line  long,  glabrous.  Anthers  yellow,  about  ^ line  long.  Style 
glabrous,  about  |in.  long.  Ovary  sessile,  glabrous,  3-lobed ; ovules  clavate. — 
F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Scrubs  of  the  tropics. 

12.  CERATOPETALUM,  Sm. 

(Petals  horn-like.) 

Calyx-tube  short,  adnate  to  the  base  of  the  ovary  ; lobes  5,  valvate,  persistent 
and  enlarged  after  flowering.  Petals  small  and  laciniate  or  none.  Stamens  10, 
inserted  on  a perigynous  disk  ; anthers  small,  the  connective  produced  into  a 
recurved  appendage.  Ovary  short,  half-inferior,  2-celled,  with  4 collateral 
ascending  ovules  in  each  cell,  tapering  into  2 more  or  less  united  styles,  free  and 
recurved  at  the  top ; stigmas  terminal.  Fruit  small,  hard  and  indehiscent, 
surrounded  by  the  5 wing-like  horizontally  spreading  enlarged  calyx-lobes. 
Seeds  solitary,  slightly  curved ; embryo  green,  curved,  in  the  axis  of  a fleshy 
albumen. — Trees  or  shrubs,  glabrous  and  resinous.  Leaves  opposite,  with  1 or  3 
digitate  leaflets  articulate  on  the  petiole.  Stipules  very  small.  Flowers  small, 
in  terminal  trichotomous  cymes  or  corymbose  panicles. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia. 

1.  C.  Virchowii  (after  Professor  Rudolph  Virchow),  F.  v.  M.,  Viet.  Nat. 
1891.  Leaves  rather  large,  glabrous  ; stipules  deltoid,  early  dropping,  leaflets  3 
or  occasionally  2,  on  conspicuous  stalklets,  ovate-lanceolar,  bluntly  acuminated, 
devoid  of  conspicuous  crenulations,  thinly  reticular-venulated  ; flowers  in  ample 
cymous  panicles  ; calyx-tube  as  well  as  pedicels  and  peduncles  beset  with  spread- 
ing very  short  hairlets ; calyx-lobes  somewhat  pale-reddish  beneath,  dark-purplish 
above  ; petals  absent ; apex  of  anthers  extremely  short ; styles  glabrous  ; summit 
of  ovulary  beset  with  minute  hairlets;  fruit  1-seeded  ; testa  brown,  glabrous; 
albumen  copious ; cotyledons  foliaceous,  dark-green,  ovate-orbicular,  flexuous, 
much  longer  than  the  radicle. 

Hab.:  On  Mt.  Bartle  Frere,  in  the  higher  region,  Stephen  Johnson. 

13.  SCHIZOMERIA,  D.  Don. 

(Alluding  to  the  laciniate  petals.) 

Calyx-tube  short,  adnate  to  the  base  of  the  ovary ; lobes  5,  valvate,  not 
enlarged  after  flowering.  Petals  small,  toothed.  Stamens  10,  inserted  outside  a 
lobed  disk  ; anthers  ovate,  the  connective  produced  into  a short  conical  appendage. 
Ovary  short,  free  except  the  broad  base,  2-celled,  with  4 ovules  in  each  cell 


540 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


[Schizomeria. 


attached  to  a pendulous  placenta ; styles  distinct,  short,  recurved,  with  terminal 
stigmas.  Fruit  a drupe,  with  the  small  calyx-lobes  reflexed  from  its  base  ; 
epicarp  thick  and  fleshy ; endocarp  bony.  Seed  solitary,  somewhat  curved ; 
embryo  green,  rather  large,  in  a fleshy  albumen.— Tree.  Leaves  opposite,  simple. 
Stipules  small.  Flowers  small,  in  terminal  trichotomous  cymes. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species,  endemic  in  Australia,  and  very  nearly  allied  to 
Ceratopetalum  in  habit  and  flowers,  but  the  fruit  is  different,  and  the  leaves  truly  simple,  the 
lamina  continuous  with  the  petiole. — Benth. 

1.  S.  ovata  (leaves  ovate),  D.  Don,  Cunon.  12,  in  Edinb.  New  Phil.  Journ. 
Apr.  to  June,  1830;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  443.  A tree  attaining  50ft.,  with  a 
dense  foliage  of  a light  green.  Leaves  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  obtuse  or 
acuminate,  mostly  3 to  4in.  long,  nearly  entire  or  with  irregular  obtuse  serra- 
tures,  shortly  narrowed  at  the  base  and  continuous  with  the  petiole,  coriaceous, 
penniveined  and  reticulate.  Flowers  small,  the  cymes  usually  loose.  Calyx- 
lobes  scarcely  above  1 line  long.  Petals  shorter  than  the  calyx,  broad  and 
toothed  and  lobed  at  the  end.  Drupe  ovoid  or  globular,  under  Jin.  in  diameter, 
white. 

Hab.:  Scrubs  along  the  North  Coast  Railway. 

The  fruit  is  very  fleshy,  and  has  a nice  sharp  acid  flavour,  and  is  useful  for  making  jam. 
Ripe  about  March. 


14.  ACKAMA,  A.  Cunn. 

(From  the  Maori  name,  Makamaka.) 

Calyx-tube  short,  campanulate ; lobes  5,  valvate.  Petals  5.  Stamens  10, 
inserted  round  a crenate  disk  ; anthers  small,  tipped  by  a minute  gland-like 
appendage  to  the  connective.  Ovary  free,  2-celled,  with  several  ovules  in  each 
cell  ; styles  filiform,  deciduous.  Capsule  small,  turgid,  septicidally  dehiscent. 
Seeds  few,  ovoid,  hairy ; embryo  cylindrical  in  the  axis  of  a fleshy  albumen. — 
Trees.  Leaves  opposite,  pinnate.  Flowers  small,  very  numerous,  in  compound 
panicles,  in  terminal  pairs,  becoming  axillary  by  the  elongation  of  the  central 
shoot. 

Besides  the  Australian  species,  which  is  endemic,  the  genus  comprises  another  from  New 
Zealand.  The  inflorescence,  which  is  uniformly  racemose  in  Weinmannia,  being  paniculate  in 
both  species  of  Ackama,  gives  them  a habit  so  different  from  that  of  Weinmannia.  that  when 
coupled  with  the  valvate  calyx  and  the  shape  of  the  fruit  there  seems  to  be  quite  sufficient  to 
maintain  Ackama  as  a distinct  genus  rather  than  as  a section  of  Weinmannia,  as  proposed  by 
A.  Gray. — Benth. 

1.  A.  Muelleri  (after  Baron  von  Mueller),  Benth.  FI.  Axtstr.  ii.  444.  A 
tree,  glabrous  or  nearly  so  except  the  inflorescence.  Leaflets  usually  5,  rarely  7 
or  3,  ovate-elliptical  or  ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate,  obtusely  and  very  shortly 
serrate,  usually  3 to  4in.  long  but  sometimes  much  larger,  narrowed  at  the  base 
and  more  or  less  petiolulate,  somewhat  coriaceous,  penniveined,  with  usually  a 
minute  tuft  of  hairs  in  the  axils  of  the  principal  primary  veins  underneath. 
Flowers  very  small  and  numerous,  clustered  along  the  short  ultimate  branches  of 
a very  compound  panicle,  the  branchlets  all  minutely  pubescent.  Calyx  about  \ 
line  long.  Petals  slightly  exceeding  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  exserted.  Capsule 
ovoid-globular,  1 to  1J  line  long. — Weinmannia  paniculata , F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii. 
83,  altered  to  W.  paniculosa,  l.c.  175. 

Hab.:  Scrubs  along  North  Coast  Railway. 

15.  WEINMANNIA,  Linn. 

(After  J.  W.  Weinmann.) 

Calyx  divided  almost  to  the  base  into  4 or  5 more  or  less  imbricate  segments. 
Petals  as  many  as  calyx-segments  or  wanting.  Stamens  twice  as  many  as  petals, 
inserted  round  the  disk  ; anthers  small.  Ovary  free,  2 or  rarely  3-celled,  with 


Weinmannia.}  XLV.  SAXIFRAGES.  641 

several  pendulous  ovules  in  each  cell ; styles  distinct,  each  with  a terminal  or 
decurrent  stigma.  Capsule  oblong  or  ovoid,  septicidally  dehiscent.  Seeds  oblong, 
reniform  or  nearly  globular,  usually  (but  not  always)  hairy  ; embryo  in  the  axis 
of  a fleshy  albumen. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  simple,  or  digitately 
or  pinnately  compound,  with  3 or  more  leaflets.  Flowers  in  simple  racemes  or 
racemose  panicles,  terminal  or  axillary,  solitary  or  clustered. 

A genus  widely  distributed  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  globe,  extending  into  extratropical 
South  America,  S.  Africa,  and  New  Zealand. — Benth. 

Leaves  3-foliolate. 

Stipules  large,  usually  persistent. 

Leaflets  6 to  lOin.  long,  often  broad,  ovate-lanceolate,  repand-serrulate. 


Flowers  yellow.  Capsule  ellipsoid-cylindrical,  8 to  9 lines  long  . . 1.  IV.  Benthami. 

Leaflets  3 to  7in.  long,  conspicuously  petiolulate,  distantly  serrulate. 

Flowers  yellow 2.  IV.  Biagiana. 


Leaflets  3 to  5-digitate,  2 to  3in.  long.  Stipules  hairy.  Petals  as  many 

as  sepals.  Anthers  reddish.  Capsule  reflexed,  1J  to  2 lines  long,  hairy  3.  W.rubifolia. 

Stipules  usually  only  found  on  the  young  growth. 

Leaflets  nearly  sessile,  2 to  6in.  long,  repand-serrulate.  Capsule  ovate, 
about  2 lines  long 4.  W.  lachnocarpa. 

Leaflets  sessile,  about  3in.  long.  Flowers  small,  about  2 lines  diameter. 

Stamens  12 5.  W.  apetala. 

1.  W.  Benthami  (after  George  Bentham,  probably  the  greatest  botanist  of 
the  century),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  180.  A tree  said  to  attain  over  100ft.  in 
height,  the  branchlets  glabrous.  Stipules  coriaceous,  often  measuring  lin., 

orbicular  or  cultrate-rotund.  Leaves  opposite,  3-foliolate  ; leaflets  petiolulate,  6 
to  lOin.  long,  3 to  5in.  broad,  ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate,  repand-serrulate, 
glabrous,  prominently  penninerved  and  somewhat  thinly  reticulate  veined. 
Flowers  in  spikes,  dense  when  young.  Bracteoles  canaliculate,  semilanceolate,  1 
line  long,  caducous.  Fruiting  racemes  several  inches  long.  Pedicels  1J  to  2 
lines  long,  and  with  the  rhachis  thinly  silky.  Sepals  5,  valvate,  1J  to 

2 lines  long,  yellow.  Petals  none.  Stamens  20  to  25,  yellow,  twice  as  long  as 

the  sepals ; filaments  setaceous.  Anthers  didymo-rotund  ; cells  2-ellipsoid, 

dehiscing  laterally.  Styles  2,  glabrous,  1J  line  long.  Stigmas  minute,  capitellate. 
Ovary  imperfectly  2-celled,  pyramidal-semiovate,  silky.  Disk  annular,  glabrous. 
Capsule  ellipsoid-cylindrical,  8 to  9 lines  long. — Geissois  Benthami,  F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  v.  180,  and  incidentally  referred  to  by  Bentham  in  FI.  Austr.  ii.  446 
under  Geissois. 

Hab.:  Scrubs  towards  the  Tweed  River. 

2.  W.  Biagiana  (after  G.  Biagi),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  16,  vii.  150.  A tree 
of  about  60  to  70ft.  high  ; bark  smooth.  Leaves  of  3 leaflets,  from  3 to  7in.  or 
lft.  long  and  2 to  3 or  8in.  broad,  with  prominent  midribs,  on  petioles  of  about 
Jin.,  coriaceous,  lanceolate-ovate,  sharply  acuminate,  distantly  toothed,  glabrous. 
Primary  peduncle  almost  glabrous  ; secondary  ones,  pedicels,  and  calyxes  with 
a very  short  silky  pubescence  ; racemose  branches  of  panicles  spike-like,  3 to  5in. 
long.  Bracteoles  falling  before  the  expansion  of  the  flowers.  Pedicels  about  1 
line  long.  Calyx  yellow,  4 or  5-partite,  1 line  long,  valvate.  Stamens  16  to  20. 
Filaments  glabrous,  sulphur-coloured,  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Anthers 
cordate-rotund,  dorsifixed,  longitudinally  dehiscing  on  both  sides.  Styles  capillary, 
glabrous,  about  1 line  long.  Stigmas  very  minute,  punctiform. 

Hab.:  Tropical  scrubs. 

3.  W.  rubifolia  (leaves  supposed  to  resemble  some  bramble),  F.  v.  M. 
(under  Geissois);  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  445.  A small  tree,  the  young  branches 
inflorescence  and  veins  of  the  leaflets  more  or  less  clothed  with  long  fine  hairs. 
Leaflets  3 or  5,  digitate,  ovate-elliptical,  acuminate,  sharply  serrate,  much 
narrowed  into  a petiolule,  rigid  but  not  thick,  the  primary  parallel  veins  very 


542 


XLV  SAXIFRAGES. 


[Weinmannia. 


prominent  underneath,  with  transverse  reticulations,  the  terminal  one  usually 
2 to  Sin.  long,  or  rarely  more,  the  lateral  ones  smaller.  Stipules  large,  hairy, 
deciduous.  Racemes  axillary,  usually  several  together  on  a very  short  common 
peduncle,  H to  Bin.  long  when  in  fruit.  Pedicels  very  short  or  scarcely  any. 
Sepals  shorter  than  the  fruit.  Petals  as  many  as  sepals,  of  the  same  length,  but 
much  narrower,  pale,  glabrous,  and  entire.  Stamens  6 to  8,  alternate  with  and 
rather  longer  than  the  calyx.  Anthers  glabrous,  cordate,  reddish,  exappen- 
diculate.  Cells  dehiscing  longitudinally.  Capsules  reflexed,  1^  to  nearly  2 lines 
long,  narrow,  hairy,  with  2,  rarely  3,  recurved  styles,  the  stigmas  shortly 
decurrent.  Seeds  2 or  3 in  each  carpel,  narrow-oblong,  the  testa  more  or  less 
extended  into  a loose  wing  at  one  or  both  ends,  or  in  some  seeds  the  nucleus 
appears  to  extend  nearly  the  whole  length. — Geissois  rubifolia,  F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  ii.  82. 

Hab.:  Southern  scrubs. 

4.  W.  lachnocarpa  (capsules  densely  hairy),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  viii.  7,  281. 
Scrub  Rosewood,  Scrub  Redwood.  “Merrany”  or  “ Marara,”  Nerang,  Schneider. 
A tall  tree  with  spreading  head,  the  trunk  often  straight  and  2ft.  in  diameter,  the 
bark  rough  and  scaly.  Branchlets  glabrous.  Leaves  trifoliolate,  the  common 
petiole  often  very  short.  Stipules  dimidiate-lanceolate,  1^  line  long.  Leaflets 
nearly  sessile,  ovate-lanceolate,  remotely  crenate  or  repand-serrulate,  2 to  Gin. 
long,  1 to  2in.  broad,  thinly-coriaceous,  acuminate,  shining  on  both  sides,  lateral 
nerves  spreading,  the  veins  and  veinlets  copiously  reticulate.  Racemes  usually 
several  on  a very  short  peduncle  or  solitary,  2 to  3in.  long  at  the  end  of  the 
branchlets.  Pedicels  short,  articulate  near  the  base,  silky  tomentose.  Calyx 
deeply  6,  rarely  5 or  7-partite,  persistent,  lobes  lanceolate  or  ovate-lanceolate. 
Petals  none  or  very  fugacious.  Stamens  usually  about  20.  Filaments  glabrous, 
linear-setaceous,  about  2 lines  long.  Anthers  minute,  cordate-rotundate,  dorsi- 
fixed,  dehiscing.  Styles  2,  rarely  8,  straight,  subulate,  setaceous,  about  line 
long,  glabrous,  free.  Stigmas  very  minute.  Capsule  ovate,  about  2 lines  long, 
almost  all  superior,  densely  woolly,  with  reddish-brown  hairs. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities;  Upper 'Barron  River,  J.  F.  Bailey. 

Wood  light-pink,  close  in  the  grain ; might  be  used  for  making  planes,  mallets,  and  chisel 
handles.  —Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  155.  Wood  used  for  boomerangs. — Schneider. 


5.  W.  apetala  (without  petals),  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  viii.  A tall  tree,  glabrous 
except  the  inflorescence.  Leaves  opposite,  digitately  compound,  leaflets  3,  sessile, 
lanceolate  and  bluntly  or  glandularly  serrate,  2 or  3in.  long,  the  petiole  usually 
under  2in.  long,  texture  membranaceous.  Inflorescence  hoary-pubescent,  race- 
mose, at  the  nodes  below  the  leaves  of  the  branchlets.  Some  of  the  smaller 
branchlets  are  destitute  of  leaves  and  then  change  the  inflorescence  to  a peduncle 
bearing  at  its  end  an  umbel  of  three  racemes,  the  common  peduncle  6 to  8 lines, 
the  secondary  peduncles  about  6 to  8 lines,  bearing  racemes  of  from  1J  to  3in. 
long  ; flowers  numerous,  scattered.  Bracts  narrow-lanceolate,  petiolate,  about  as 
long  as  the  pedicels.  Pedicels  very  slender,  about  2 or  3 lines  long.  Flowers 
when  expanded  2 lines  diameter  ; calyx-lobes  5.  Petals  none.  Stamens  12  or 
more,  much  exserted,  the  filaments  of  unequal  length,  and  often  somewhat 
flattened  ; anthers  some  much  larger  than  the  others,  didymous.  Styles  2,  free, 
spreading,  glabrous.  Ovary  hirsute  except  at  the  very  base.  Fruit  as  yet 
unknown. 

Hab.:  Kamerunga,  E.  Cowley.  Flowering  in  December  and  January. 

The  present  species  approaches  near  to  W.  lachnocarpa,  F.  v.  M.,  but  differs  in  its  more  lax 
slender  inflorescence,  more  membranous  leaves,  which  are  not  so  prominently  reticulate  ; its 
longer  stamens,  as  well  as  probably  the  flower  lobes  to  the  calyx. 


XLV.  SAXIFRAGES. 


543 


16.  BAUERA,  Banks. 

(In  honour  of  Francis  and  Ferdinand  Bauer,  botanical  painters.) 

Calyx  divided  nearly  to  the  base  into  6 to  10,  rarely  4 or  5,  spreading  segments, 
often  toothed,  valvate  or  slightly  imbricate.  Petals  as  many  as  calyx-segments. 
Stamens  indefinite,  few  or  numerous,  inserted  round  a narrow  disk  ; anthers 
short.  Ovary  wholly  or  partially  free,  2-celled,  with  2 or  more  ovules  in  each 
cell ; styles  distinct,  recurved.  Capsule  superior  or  half-inferior,  broad,  truncate, 
opening  loculicidally  in  2 valves,  or  in  4 from  the  septicidal  splitting  of  the 
valves.  Seeds  obovate  with  a granulate  testa ; embryo  nearly  terete,  in  a fleshy 
albumen. — Shrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  each  with  8 leaflets  without  any  common 
petiole,  so  as  to  have  the  appearance  of  a whorl  of  6 leaves.  Stipules  none. 
Flowers  axillary,  solitary,  but  sometimes  the  pairs  crowded  in  a terminal  leafy 
head. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  By  a mistake  of  Salisbury’s,  copied  by  subsequent  authors, 
the  name  of  the  genus  has  been  attributed  to  Kennedy.  In  Andrews’  “ Botanical  Repository,” 
where  it  was  first  published,  it  is  expressly  stated  that  it  was  named  by  Banks,  without  any 
allusion  to  Kennedy. — Benth. 

Flowers  pedicellate.  Ovary  superior.  Ovules  several.  Leaves  mostly  serrate  1.  B.  rubioides. 
Flowers  sessile.  Ovary  superior.  Ovules  several,  ascending.  Leaves  mostly 

3-toothed 2.  B.  capitata. 


1.  23.  rubioides  (resembling  a Rubia),  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  198  ; Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  447.  An  elegant  shrub,  sometimes  small,  slender  and  prostrate, 
sometimes  erect  and  bushy,  attaining  5 or  6ft.  or  even  more  ; branches  terete, 
glabrous  or  more  frequently  pubescent  or  hirsute  with  long  fine  hairs.  Leaflets 
oblong  or  lanceolate,  rather  acute,  rarely  exceeding  fin.  and  sometimes  not  fin. 
long,  evergreen  and  often  shining,  marked  by  a few  serratures,  sometimes  deep, 
sometimes  obscure,  or  almost  disappearing.  Flowers  pink  or  white,  on  slender 
pedicels,  sometimes  shorter,  but  more  frequently  longer  than  the  leaves.  Calyx- 
segments  and  petals  rarely  fewer  than  6,  and  often  8 or  9.  Petals  longer  than 
the  calyx,  often  twice  as  long,  spreading  to  a diameter  of  from  £ to  fin. 
Capsule  shorter  than  the  persistent  calyx,  very  broad,  wholly  superior  although 
attached  by  a broad  base,  several-seeded. — Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  96  ; Bot.  Mag.  t. 
715;  DC.  Prod.  iv.  13;  Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  149,  t.  31;  B.  rubiezfolia , 
Salisb.  in  Ann.  Bot.  i.  514,  t.  10 ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1313 ; F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  iv.  23;  B.  humilis,  Sweet;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1197;  DC.  Prod.  iv. 
13  ; B.  Billardieri,  D.  Don,  Cunon.  13,  in  Edinb.  New  Phil.  Journ.  Apr.  to 
June,  1830. 

Hab.:  Many  localities  in  southern  Queensland. 


2.  23.  capitata  (flowers  in  heads),  Ser.  in  DC.  Prod.  iv.  13;  Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  447.  A small  shrub,  either  diffuse  or  with  a woody  stock  and  numerous 
slender  stems  of  fft.,  slightly  pubescent.  Leaflets  narrow,  scarcely  above  fin. 
long,  obtuse,  usually  with  one  prominent  lobe  or  tooth  on  each  side.  Flowers 
almost  sessile,  solitary  in  each  axil,  but  several  pairs  close  together  at  the  ends  of 
the  branches,  forming  little  leafy  heads.  Calyx-segments  4 to  6,  usually  5,  about 
2 lines  long,  more  distinctly  3-fid  than  the  leaves.  Stamens  not  numerous, 
anthers  small.  Ovary  free  but  attached  by  a broad  base  ; ovules  several  in  each 
cell,  ascending  from  near  the  base  of  the  partition.  Capsule  loculicidal  but 
scarcely  septicidal.  Seeds  rather  large,  pubescent,  rugose,  with  a prominent 
raphe. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  24. 

Hab.:  Logan  River,  Rev.  B.  Scortecldni ; Fraser’s  Island,  Hon.  Miss  Lovell. 


544 


XLVI.  CRASSULACE7E. 

Order  XLVI.  CRASSULACE®. 


Sepals  3 or  more,  usually  5,  but  sometimes  up  to  20,  free  from  the  ovary,  but 
occasionally  united  in  a lobed  calyx.  Petals  as  many  as  sepals,  free  or  rarely 
united  in  a lobed  corolla.  Stamens  as  many  or  twice  as  many  as  petals,  inserted 
with  them  at  the  base  of  the  calyx.  Ovary  superior,  the  carpels  as  many  as  the 
petals,  distinct,  usually  with  a small  flat  scale  at  the  base  of  each  ; with  several 
ovules  in  each  ; styles  simple,  distinct.  Ripe  carpels  capsular.  Seeds  several, 
with  a thin  fleshy  albumen  and  straight  embryo. — Herbs  or  rarely  low  shrubs  or 
undershrubs.  Leaves  succulent,  without  stipules.  Flowers  in  terminal  racemes, 
cymes  or  panicles,  or  rarely  in  axillary  clusters. 

A rather  numerous  Order,  extending  over  the  greater  part  of  the  globe,  but  particularly 
abounding  in  S.  Africa  and  in  the  rocky  districts  of  Europe  and  Asia.  The  only  Australian 
genus  is  generally  spread  over  the  area  of  the  Order.  The  Order  is  nearly  allied  to  some 
herbaceous  Saxifragea :,  but  it  is  more  apocarpous,  the  stamens  less  perigynous,  and  is  readily 


known  by  its  succulent  leaves  and  thoroughly  isomerous  flowers. — Benth. 

Stamens  isomerous  with  the  petals.  Petals  free  or  scarcely  united  at  the 

base.  Flowers  4 to  5-merous,  small  mostly  annual  herbs 1.  Till/ea. 

Stamens  twice  as  many  as  the  petals.  Petals  united  nearly  to  the  middle  or 
beyond.  Calyx  large,  shortly  4-fid 2.  *Bryophyllum. 


1.  TILL/EA,  Linn. 

(In  honour  of  Michael  Angelo  Tilli,  a botanist  of  Pisa.) 

(Bulliarda,  DC.) 

Sepals,  petals,  stamens  and  carpels  8 or  4 each,  very  rarely  (in  species  not 
Australian)  5,  all  distinct.  Ripe  carpels  opening  along  the  inner  edge,  the  seeds 
often  reduced  to  1 or  2 in  each. — Small,  often  minute,  herbs.  Leaves  opposite. 


Flowers  minute,  axillary  or  in  a terminal  leafy  panicle. 

The  genus  has  very  nearly  the  extensive  geographical  range  of  the  Order. 

Flowers  under  1 line  long,  axillary.  Carpels  short  and  obtuse. 

Flowers  in  dense  leafy  clusters.  Petals  shorter  than  the  sepals  . . . . 1.2’.  verticillnris. 

Flowers  solitary,  mostly  pedicellate.  Petals  as  long  as  or  exceeding  the 

sepals. 

Leaves  not  2 lines  long.  Pedicels  usually  longer.  No  scales  under  the 

carpels 2.  2'.  purpurata. 

Leaves  often  above  |in.  long.  Pedicels  rarely  as  long  as  the  leaves.  A 

scale  under  each  carpel 3.  T.  recurva. 


1.  T.  verticillaris  (leaves  appearing  in  whorls),  DC.  Prod.  iii.  382  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  451.  An  annual,  when  first  flowering  simple  and  lin.  high,  but 
when  old  much  branched,  forming  dense  tufts  of  3 or  4in.  diameter,  or  slender 
and  4 or  Sin.  long.  Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or  linear,  connate  at  the  base,  1 to  2 
lines  long.  Flowers  very  small  in  dense  axillary  clusters  mixed  with  small 
leaves,  many  of  them  nearly  sessile,  others  on  pedicels  of  1 or  2 lines.  Sepals 
usually  4,  very  rarely  5,  acute  or  aristate,  about  J line  long.  Petals  shorter, 
narrotv,  acute.  Carpels  without  scales,  wThen  ripe  very  obtuse,  not  exceeding  the 
calyx,  with  1 or  2 seeds  in  each. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  145  ; T.  pedunculata, 
Sieb.  PL  Exs.,  not  of  Sm.;  T.  adscendens  and  T.  colorata,  Nees,  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  277. 

Hab.:  On  the  Maranoa,  Mitchell ; Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  F.v.  Mueller ; common. 

2.  T.  purpurata  (plant  purplish),  Hook.  f.  in  Hook.  Bond.  Journ.  vi.  472, 
and  Tasm.  FI.  i.  145  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  of  Viet.  ii.  t.  19 ; Fragm.  vi.  118 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  451.  A very  slender  decumbent  annual,  of  intricate  growth,  attaining  2 to 
4in.  in  height.  Leaves  linear,  connate  at  the  base,  1 to  2 lines  long.  Flowers 
minute,  on  slender  solitary  pedicels,  mostly  longer  than  the  leaves,  rarely  short. 
Petals  about  •§•  line  long ; sepals  shorter,  acute  or  obtuse.  Carpels  obtuse,  not 
longer  than  the  sepals,  often  violet,  with  several  seeds. 

Hab.:  Yandilla,  F.  Str  liver. 


Tillcea.) 


XLVI.  CRASSULACE5L 


545 


3.  T.  recurva  (styles  recurved),  Hook.f.  FI.  Tasrn.  i.  146  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  452.  A slender  plant,  densely  tufted  and  1 or  2in.  high  in  sandy  places, 
lengthening  out  to  1ft.  in  water.  Leaves  linear  or  linear-lanceolate,  Jin.  long  or 
more  in  the  longer  specimens,  1 to  2 lines  in  the  smaller  ones.  Flowers  few, 
small,  solitary,  on  peduncles  rarely  exceeding  the  leaves.  Sepals  about  f line 
long,  acuminate.  Petals  about  as  long.  Carpels  acuminate  with  the  recurved 
styles,  with  a small  cuneate  or  linear-spathulate  scale  under  each,  sometimes  half 
as  long  as  the  carpel.  Fruit-carpels  about  as  long  as  the  calyx,  with  2 or  3 seeds 
in  each. — T.  verticillaris,  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  295,  not  of  DC.;  T.  intricata,  Nees.  in 
PL  Preiss.  i.  278. 

Hab.:  Southern  Queensland. 


2.  *BRYOPHYLLUM,  Salisb. 

(Referring  to  its  habit  of  forming  young  plants  at  the  notches 

of  the  leaves.) 

Calyx  inflated,  cylindrical  or  tetragonous,  shortly  4-fid,  valyate ; corolla 
urceolate  or  subcampanulate,  the  limb  shortly  4-fid,  spreading.  Stamens  8,  in  2 
rows,  inserted  in  the  middle  of  the  corolla-tube ; filaments  filiform ; anthers 
oblong,  shortly  exserted.  Scales  free  or  adnate  to  the  carpels.  Carpels  4,  free  or 
connate  at  the  base,  elongate,  narrowed  into  elongated,  connivent,  exserted  styles, 
with  capitellate  stigmas  ; ovules  in  each  carpel  numerous.  Follicles  4,  many- 
seeded. — Tall,  stout,  fleshy  herbs,  shrubby  at  the  base.  Leaves  opposite, 
petiolate,  simple,  or  unequally  pinnate,  crenate.  Flowers  rather  large,  nodding, 
in  many-flowered  paniculate  cymes,  greenish-white  or  red ; branches  of  the 
panicle  opposite. — Bentli.  and  Hook.  Gen.  PI.  i.  658. 

A genus  of  about  4 species,  the  one  naturalised  in  Queensland  common  throughout  the  tropics 
of  the  world. 

1.  B.  calycinum  (referring  to  the  prominent  calyx),  Salisb.  A short  or  tall 
shrub,  on  the  tropical  coast  sands  often  attaining  8ft.,  branching  from  the  base, 
glabrous  throughout,  often  spotted  with  dark-purple,  and  more  or  less  4-angled. 
Leaves  fleshy,  crenate,  ovate-orbicular  or  unequally  pinnate,  with  ovate  segments  ; 
the  terminal  one  large,  often  very  large  on  the  tropical  plants.  Flowers  1J  to  2in. 
long,  pendulous.  Calyx  inflated,  1 to  ljin.  long,  green,  striped  with  purple  at 
the  base.  Corolla-tube  green  below,  bright  reddish-purple  in  the  exserted  portion, 
globose-octagonous  at  the  base,  abruptly  constricted  immediately  above,  then 
produced  into  an  elongated  4-angled  ventricose  tube;  limb  4-fid,  segments 
abruptly  acuminate,  very  acute,  spreading.  Stamens  slightly  exceeding  the 
corolla-tube.  Styles  equalling  the  stamens,  erect,  filiform.  Stigmas  sparingly 
papillose.  Squamulae  truncate,  short,  nearly  as  broad  as  long,  free,  or  very 
slightly  adhering  to  the  carpels. — Britten,  in  Oliver  FI.  Trop.  Afri.;  Bot.  Mag. 
t.  1400. 

Hab.:  An  African  plant  naturalised  in  many  parts  of  Queensland.  Not  indigenous  as  stated 
by  Baron  Mueller  in  Viet.  Nat.  Nov.  1884. 


Order  XLYII.  DROSERACE®. 

Calyx  free  or  very  shortly  adnate  to  the  broad  base  of  the  ovary,  divided  to  the 
base  or  nearly  so,  into  4 or  5 or  rarely  8 segments  or  sepals.  Petals  as  many  as 
calyx-segments,  hypogynous  or  slightly  perigynous.  Stamens  as  many  as  petals, 
or  rarely,  in  genera  not  Australian,  twice  as  many  or  more,  and  inserted  with 
them.  Ovary  either  6-celled,  with  2 to  5 parietal  placentas  or  1 basal  placenta, 
or  2 or  3-celled,  with  several  ovules  to  each  placenta  or  cell ; styles  either  as  many 


546 


XLVII.  DROSERACE^. 


as  placentas,  simple  or  divided  to  the  base  so  as  to  appear  twice  the  number,  or 
variously  branched,  or  rarely  the  styles  united  into  one ; stigmas  various, 
Capsule  opening  loculicidally,  in  as  many  valves  as  cells  or  placentas,  the  valves 
rarely  splitting  septicidally.  Seeds  several,  with  a reticulate  testa,  sometimes 
produced  beyond  the  nucleus  into  a loose  wing ; embryo  cylindrical  or  sometimes 
minute  in  a fleshy  albumen. — Herbs.  Leaves  usually  ciliate  or  covered  with 
glandular  hairs.  Flowers  solitary  or  in  one-sided  racemes,  either  simple  or 
forming  a branching  cyme. 

A small  Order,  found  in  nearly  all  parts  of  the  world,  the  principal  genus  closely  allied  to  the 
herbaceous  Saxifrages,  differing  chiefly  in  the  insertion  of  the  petals  and  stamens,  being 
more  generally  hypogynous ; the  whole  group  is  easily  recognised  by  the  almost  invariably 
glandular  leaves,  involute  in  vernation.  Of  the  3 Australian  genera,  the  principal  one  constitutes 
nearly  the  whole  Order  and  ranges  over  the  general  area  ; of  the  others  one  is  endemic  and  very 
anomalous,  the  other  is  met  with  in  Europe,  Asia,  and  Australia. — Bentli.  (in  part). 


Leaves  glandular,  cauline,  or  alternate.  Ovary  1-celled.  Styles  2 to  5,  distinct 

or  shortly  united  at  the  base  1.  Droskra. 

Cauline  leaves,  whorled,  vesicular,  glabrous.  Ovary  1-celled.  Styles  5,  with 

terminal  branching  stigmas 2.  Aldrovanda. 

Leaves  more  or  less  glandular.  Ovary  2-celled.  Style  undivided 3.  Byblis. 


1.  DROSERA,  Linn. 

(From  drosos,  dew.) 

(Sondera,  Lehm.) 

Calyx-segments  4,  5,  or  rarely  8.  Petals  as  many.  Stamens  as  many  ; 
anthers  opening  laterally  or  outwards  in  longitudinal  slits.  Ovary  1-celled,  with 
2 to  5,  usually  3,  parietal  placentas  ; styles  as  many  as  placentas,  simple  or 
variously  branched.  Capsule  opening  in  as  many  valves  as  placentas,  with  the 
placentas  in  their  centre. — Herbs.  Leaves  usually  involute  in  vernation,  the 
lamina  more  or  less  covered  on  the  upper  side  with  glandular  hairs  or  cilia  and 
bordered  with  longer  ones,  usually  irritable  and  closing  over  insects  or  other 
objects  resting  on  them,  the  under  side  and  petioles  without  glandular  hairs. 
Stipules  when  present  scarious  and  usually  lobed  or  jagged.  Flowers  solitary  or 
in  one-sided  racemes  or  forked  cymes,  on  radical  scapes  or  terminal  peduncles. 

A large  genus,  with  the  extensive  geographical  range  of  the  Order,  and  comprising  the  great 
majority  of  its  species.  Of  the  Queensland  species,  several  are  also  in  E.  India,  the  Archipelago, 
and  New  Zealand. 

The  Australian  species  may  be  readily  distributed  into  the  two  old-established  sections  Rorella 
and  Ergaleium,  if  characterised  chiefly  by  their  mode  of  vegetation.  In  Rorella  the  stock  or 
stem,  very  short  and  completely  covered  with  the  leaves,  except  in  D.  indica,  forms  at  its  upper 
end  the  winter  bud  for  the  following  year’s  vegetation,  the  lower  end  dying  away  either  at  the 
close  of  the  season  or  after  having  endured  several  years  covered  with  the  old  imbricate  bases 
of  the  leaves,  never  forming  a bulb  at  the  base,  but  emitting  new  roots  or  sometimes  stolons 
immediately  under  the  fresh  leaves  of  the  new  year.  In  this  section  also  the  styles  are  usually 
simple  or  once  branched,  very  rarely  dichotomous,  and  the  stipules  are  wanting  only  in  3 
species  In  the  second  section,  Ertjaleium,  the  short  stem-like  stock  forms  usually,  perhaps 
always,  at  its  lower  end  a bulb,  and  at  the  upper  end  either  a rosette  of  leaves  with  a leafless 
scape  or  leafy  stems,  which  appear  to  be  annually  renewed,  although  in  what  manner  this 
takes  place  has  not  been  observed.  The  stock  or  stem  between  the  bulb  and  the  rosette  has 
frequently  loose  ragged  remains  of  leaves  or  petioles,  as  if  it  were  partially  at  least  perennial. 
In  this  section  the  styles  are  always  short  and  very  much  divided,  forming  usually  a dense 
tuft  on  the  ovary,  and  the  stipules  are  either  entirely  wanting,  or,  in  D.  Banksii,  small  and 
very  evanescent.  In  both  sections,  however,  and  especially  in  Rorella , there  are  single  excep- 
tional species,  which  prevent  giving  any  definite  character  derived  from  the  single  diversities  in 
the  styles  and  other  floral  characters.  Planchon,  in  his  excellent  study  of  the  genus,  in  the 
“ Annales  des  Sciences  Naturelles,”  ser.  3,  ix.,  proposes  each  of  these  anomalous  species  as  a 
distinct  section,  but  that  course  appears  to  me  not  to  tend  towards  clearness  of  method,  but 
rather  to  confuse  the  mind,  and  I have  preferred  adopting,  with  slight  modifications,  the  two  old 
sections,  subdividing  them  more  artificially  in  the  following  table. — Bentli. 


Drosera.\ 


XL  VII.  DROSERACEiE. 


547 


Sect.  1.  Rorella.  — Stock  not  bulbous,  the  upper  end  perennial.  Scapes  leafless  (except  in 
D.  indica).  Stipules  often  present.  Styles  usually  simple  or  divided  into  2 simple  branches,  or 


rarely  dichotomous. 

No  stipules. 

Stems  elongated.  Leaves  alternate,  linear.  Racemes  several-flowered. 

Styles  divided  to  the  base  into  2 filiform  branches 1.  D.  indica. 

Stems  very  short.  Leaves  lanceolate,  3 to  7in.  long,  ^ to  lin.  broad. 

Flower  racemes  long.  Styles  shortly  bifid 2.  D.  Adelce. 

Stipules  scarious.  Leaves  radical,  rosulate  (except  in  IJ.  binata)  the  stems 


or  stock  dying  away  below  the  rosette  or  rarely  persisting  and  densely 
covered  with  the  dried  remains  of  the  old  leaves  and  stipules. 

Scape  glabrous,  filiform,  with  1 minute  4-merous  flower.  Styles  4,  un- 


divided   3.  D.  pygmcea. 

Scape  filiform,  with  a short  loose  almost  corymbose  raceme  of  2 to  4 
flowers.  Leaves  obovate  or  orbicular. 

Scape  glandular,  with  longer  white  hairs 4.  7).  Lovellce. 

Scapes  attaining  several  inches.  Pedicel  very  short.  Calyx  above  1 line  long. 

Styles. 5,  simple,  fringed  at  the  stigmatic  end 5.  D.  Burmanni. 

Styles  3 or  4,  divided  to  the  base  into  2 branches,  entire  or  forked  at 

the  end 6.  D.  spathulata. 

Racemes,  especially  the  calyxes,  softly  villous.  Styles  3,  dichotomous. 

Leaves  orbicular,  the  petioles  long,  woolly-hairy  as  well  as  the  stipules  . 7-.  Z>.  petiolaris. 

Scape  tall,  with  a loose  cyme.  Leaves  linear,  forked  or  dichotomous. 

Styles  divided  into  a dense  tuft  of  numerous  lobes 8.  D.  binata. 


Sect.  II.  Erg’aleium.— Stock  short,  slender,  stem-like,  naked  or  with  rayyed  remains  of  old 
petioles,  forming  (usually  if  not  ahcays)  a bulb  at  the  lower  end  and  producing  at  the  upper  end  a 
rosette  of  leaves  and  leafless  scapes,  or  leafy  stems  or  branches.  Stipules  none  (or  in  D.  Banksii 
small  and  evanescent).  Styles  dichotomous  oi • divided  into  very  numerous  filiform  branches, 
forming  a dense  tuft. 

(Nearly  all  the  species  of  this  section  dye  the  paper  in  which  they  are  preserved  a rich 
carmine  or  purple  colour.) 

Rootstock  terminating  in  a single  or  branched  leafy  flowering  stem.  Lower 
leaves  reduced  to  short  linear-subulate  or  linear-lanceolate  scales  or  (in 
the  first  2 species)  rosulate  and  not  peltate.  Stem-leaves  peltate,  on 
filiform  petioles,  often  clustered  in  the  axils. 

Stem-leaves  linear-peltate,  i.e.  broadly  crescent-shaped  or  at  least  with  2 
prominent  angles.  Lower  leaves,  when  present,  rosulate,  not  peltate. 

Racemes  simple,  the  pedicels  all  short. 


Sepals  entire,  glabrous.  Seeds  narrow-linear 9.  Z).  auriculata. 

Sepals  toothed,  villous  or  nearly  glabrous.  Seeds  ovoid 10.  D.  peltata. 

Stem-leaves  orbicular-peltate,  without  angles,  the  lower  ones  not  rosulate, 
often  reduced  to  narrow  acute  scales.  Flowers  few,  small,  in  a simple 
raceme,  lower  pedicels  short.  Stipules  often  to  the  upper  leaves.  Styles 
not  much  divided 11.  D.  Banksii. 


1.  B.  indica  (first  met  with  in  India),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  i.  319  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  456.  Leafy  stems,  from  a few  inches  to  1 or  nearly  2ft.  long.  Leaves 
linear,  acuminate,  often  several  inches  long,  fringed  with  the  glandular  cilite  of 
the  genus,  either  quite  to  the  base  or  leaving  a short  glabrous  petiole,  often  half 
stem-clasping,  but  not  sheathing.  Stipules  none.  Flowers  in  loose,  lateral, 
often  leaf-opposed  racemes,  short  and  few-flowered,  or  long  with  more  numerous 
flowers,  glabrous  or  glandular-pubescent.  Pedicels  longer  than  the  calyx. 
Sepals  narrow,  about  \\  line  long  in  flower,  2 lines  in  fruit.  Anthers  oblong- 
linear.  Styles  8,  divided  to  the  base,  each  into  2 filiform  branches,  dilated  and 

stigmatic  on  the  inner  side  at  the  end.  Seeds  obovoid,  with  a close  testa. 

Planch,  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3,  ix.  204  ; Wight,  111.  t.  20  C.;  F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet, 
i.  58  ; P.  serpens,  Planch,  l.c. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Shoalwater  Bay  and  Keppel  Bay.  II.  Brown  ; Lizard 
Island  (plants  small)  ; Endeavour  River,  It.  Brown,  A.  Cunningham  ; Port  Curtis,  M'Gillivray  ; 
Rockhampton,  Tliozet ; Broadsound,  Bowman  ; and  many  other  localities  both  north  and  south. 

Common  in  F.ast  India  and  the  Archipelago,  extending  as  far  as  Amoy,  in  China,  and  also  in 
vari  us  parts  of  tropical  Africa.  The  Ausiralian  specimens  are  usually  larger,  with  longer 
racemes  and  larger  flowers  than  the  Indian  ones,  but  not  always  so,  and  there  is  no  other 
difference. — Benth. 


548 


XL  VII.  DROSERACE.E. 


[Dr oxer  a. 


2.  D.  Adelae  (after  Adelre  de  L’Arbre),  F.  r.  M.  Fraym.  iv.  154,  t.  33.  A 
soft  hairy  plant.  Roots  fibrous,  the  fibrils  woolly-villous  ; stems  short  or  almost 
wanting.  Stipules  only  a few  lines  long,  brownish,  semilanceolate,  scarious. 
Leaves  elongate-lanceolate,  tapering  to  very  short  petioles,  3 to  7in.  long,  A to 
lin.  broad,  margins  copiously  glandular-pilose,  underside  nearly  glabrous,  lateral 
nerves  widely  spreading  and  much  branched.  Peduncles  with  raceme  from  a 
few  to  9in.  long,  nearly  the  whole  inflorescence  very  softly  hairy  with  crispate 
hoary  fulvous  hairs.  Bracteoles  linear-setaceous,  1 to  2 lines  long,  sometimes 
forked.  Pedicels  slender,  4 to  5 lines  long.  Calyx  glabrous,  deeply  5-partite  ; 
segments  lanceolate,  about  1A  line  long.  Petals  acute-lanceolate,  about  2 lines 
long.  Stamens  5,  hypogynous ; filaments  very  short,  subcuneate.  Anthers 
yellow  ; cells  minute,  opening  longitudinally,  broad  and  curved-ellipsoid.  Styles 
3,  very  shortly  bifid,  glabrous,  stigmas  minute,  divergently  bilobed.  Capsule 
small,  membranous,  scarcely  1 line  high,  prominently  3-valved.  Seeds  not  very 
numerous  at  maturity,  subglobose,  umbonate,  black,  A line  diameter,  foveolate- 
clathrate. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallachy  (F.  v.  M.) 


3.  D.  pygmaea  (dwarfish),  DC.  Prod.  i.  317  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  457.  A 
minute  species,  said  to  be  annual,  but  evidently  forming  a hibernating  bud  in  the 
centre  of  the  rosette,  like  the  other  species  of  the  section.  Leaves  rosulate,  orbi- 
cular, A to  nearly  1 line  diameter,  on  slender  petioles,  forming  tufts  of  about  Ain. 
diameter.  Stipules  scarious,  deeply  lobed.  Scapes  glabrous,  filiform,  A to  nearly 
lin.  long,  bearing  a single  minute  terminal  flower.  Sepals  4,  about  ± line  long 
in  flower,  nearly  1 line  in  fruit.  Petals  rather  larger.  Styles  4,  slightly  club- 
shaped  and  stigmatic  at  the  end.  Capsule  4-valved.  Seeds  few,  rather  large  in 
proportion,  ovoid. — Planch,  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3,  ix.  289 ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm. 
i.  29  ; F.  v.  M.  PL  Viet.  i.  56. 

Hab.:  Fraser’s  Island,  Hon.  Miss  Lovell. 


4.  D.  Lovellae  (after  Hon.  Miss  S.  Lovell),  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  vii.  A small  deep- 
red  plant.  Leaves  rosulate,  spathulate,  3 lines  long,  and  about  lj  line  broad  at 
the  end,  from  whence  it  narrows  to  a broad  flat  petiole,  the  lamina  bearing  near 
the  margin  a deep- red  fringe  wThich  does  not  extend  to  the  petiole,  which  is 
glabrous.  Stipules  scarious,  deeply  cut  into  narrow  lobes.  Scapes  1 to  lAin. 
high,  reddish,  slightly  glandular,  with  a few  longer  white  hairs,  flattened  and 
with  a longitudinal  centre  groove,  bearing  at  the  end  3 flowers  on  short  pedicels. 
Sepals  tinted  with  red,  about  f line  long.  Petals  white,  about  line  long  ; the 
stamens  only  about  half  that  length.  Anthers  nearly  globular.  Styles  4,  slightly 
club-shaped  and  stigmatic  at  the  end  as  in  D.  pygnuea.  Capsule  4-valved,  but 
only  an  old  one  seen. 

Hab.:  Fraser’s  Island,  Hon.  Miss  S.  Lovell. 

5.  D.  Burmanni  (after  N.  L.  Burmann),  Yald ; DC.  Prod.  i.  318 ; Bentlu  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  459.  Leaves  all  radical,  rosulate,  obovate-spathulate,  about  3 or  4 lines 
diameter,  narrowed  into  a petiole  not  so  long.  Stipules  scarious,  cut  into  narrow 
lobes,  not  so  long  as  the  petiole.  Scapes  solitary  or  2 or  3 from  the  same  tuft, 
slender,  attaining  5 or  6in.  and  rarely  under  3in.  long,  the  upper  portion  occupied 
by  a slender  1 -sided  raceme  of  several  flowers.  Pedicels  short.  Sepals  glabrous, 
1A  to  2 lines  long.  Anthers  small.  Styles  5,  undivided,  filiform,  not  branched 
but  slightly  dilated  and  fringed  towards  the  end. — Planch,  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser. 
3,  ix.  190 ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  944. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Lizard  Island;  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and 
Solander ; Rockhampton,  P.  O’Slianesy  ; common  north  and  south. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  extending  to  S.  China 
Without  examining  the  styles,  it  is  very  difficult  to  distinguish  it  from  D.  spathulata. — Benth. 


Drosera.] 


XLVII.  DROSERACE^h 


549 


6.  D.  spathulata  (leaves  spoon-shaped),  Labill.  PI.  Nov.  Roll.  i.  79,  t.  106, 
f.  1 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  459.  A stemless  species,  not  very  easy  to  distinguish 
from  the  coarser  specimens  of  D.  Burmanni  without  examining  the  styles.  Leaves 
rosulate,  obovate  or  spathulate,  not  usually  so  broad  as  in  D.  Burmanni,  and  often 
^in.  long,  sometimes  oblong-spathulate  and  narrowed  into  a rather  long  petiole. 
Stipules  scarious,  cut  into  narrow  lobes.  Scapes  usually  3 to  6in.  high,  including 
the  simple  or  rarely  forked  1-sided  raceme.  Pedicels  short,  glabrous  as  well  as 
the  calyx  or  minutely  glandular-pubescent.  Sepals  about  line  long,  often 
united  at  the  base.  Petals  pink,  red  or  white,  as  long  as  or  rather  exceeding  the 
calyx.  Anthers  oblong.  Styles  8 or  rarely  4,  but  divided  to  tbe  base  into  2 
branches  either  entire  and  filiform  or  slightly  dilated,  emarginate  or  shortly  forked 
at  the  end.  Seeds  numerous,  small. — DC.  Prod.  i.  318  ; Planch,  in  Ann.  Sc. 
Nat.  ser.  3,  ix.  193 ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  29  ; Dot.  Mag.  t.  5240  ; F.  v.  M.  PI. 
Viet.  i.  66. 

Hab.:  From  the  southern  border  to  Rockingham  Bay. 

The  species  is  also  in  New  Zealand.  Some  specimens  of  Cuming’s,  from  the  Philippine  Islands, 
are  also  referred  to  it  by  Planchon,  and  do  not  in  fact  appear  at  all  different.  They  are,  however, 
probably  the  same  as  the  S.  Chinese  D.  Loureiri,  Hook,  and  Arn.  Bot.  Beech.  167,  t.  31;  Benth. 
FI.  Hongk.  130,  which  must  in  that  ease  be  united  with  D.  spathulata.  Among  the  Australian 
specimens  there  appear  to  be  two  slightly  different  forms,  one  with  larger  deeper-coloured 
flowers,  and  the  style-branches  usually  dilated  and  emarginate  at  the  end,  the  other  more  slender, 
with  paler  and  smaller  flowers,  the  style-branches  divided  some  way  down  into  two  slender 
forks.- — Benth. 

7.  D.  petiolaris  (having  prominent  petioles),  Pt.  By.  in  DC.  Prod.  i.  318  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  460.  Stock  short,  densely  tufted,  with  long  silky  or  rusty 
hairs  covering  the  persistent  bases  of  the  old  leaves  and  stipules.  Leaves  rosulate, 
orbicular  or  broadly  obovate,  rarely  above  2 lines  diameter,  on  a rather  broad 
petiole  of  \ to  lin.  in  the  ordinary  form,  the  under  side  of  the  lamina  and  the 
petiole  clothed  with  long  silky  hairs.  Stipules  scarious  but  not  prominent. 
Scapes  in  the  largest  specimens  1ft.  high  but  usually  about  half  that,  including 
the  rather  loose,  often  long,  1 -sided  raceme,  the  calyx,  pedicels  and  rhachis  more 
or  less  villous  with  soft  silky  or  velvety  hairs.  Pedicels  rather  shorter  than  the 
calyx,  often  reflexed.  Sepals  above  1 line  long  in  flower,  2 lines  in  fruit.  Petals 
broad,  purple,  rather  large.  Anthers  small.  Styles  3,  repeatedly  dichotomous, 
the  last  branches  short  and  stigmatic. — D.  fulra,  Planch,  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3, 
ix.  289. 

(Jab.:  Islands  of  tbe  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  li.  Brown;  Russell,  Norman  and  Gilbert  Rivers ; 
Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander,  R.  Brown. 

Banks’  specimens  are  remarkable  for  their  petiole  1 to  2in.  long  and  less  dilated,  with  a lamina 
of  1 to  2 lines  diameter,  which  induced  Planchon  to  consider  them  as  belonging  to  a distinct 
species;  but  R.  Brown’s  carefully-selected  series  of  specimens  show  every  gradation  from  the 
longest  to  the  shortest  petioles. — Benth. 

Planchon  describes  the  styles  of  this  species  as  twice-bifid  ; I find  them  3 or  4 times  bifid.  It 
is,  however,  exceedingly  difficult  to  trace  their  ramifications  from  dried  specimens.  In  the  bud 
they  form  a dense  mass  which  requires  great  care  in  unfolding,  and  after  flowering  they  are  so 
mixed  in  the  withered  petals  that  it  is  almost  impossible  to  extract  them  whole.  The  leaves  are, 
as  observed  by  Planchon  (l.c.  289,  290)  not  peltate,  and  the  association  of  the  species  with  the 
very  dissimilar  D.  Banksii  into  one  section  (Lasiocephalnm),  proposed  by  Planchon  (l.c.  94),  and 
founded  partly  on  this  character,  can  scarcely  be  admitted.— Benth. 

8.  D.  binata  (leaflets  usually  in  twos),  Lahill.  PI.  Nov.  Hull.  i.  78,  t.  105  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  461.  Stock  small,  appearing  sometimes  to  emit  creeping 
stolons.  Leaves  radical,  on  long  petioles,  the  lamina  divided  to  the  base  into  2 
long  linear  lobes,  sometimes  again  once  or  twice  forked,  and  often  2 or  3in.  long, 
elegantly  fringed  by  the  glandular  cilia  of  the  genus,  glabrous  underneath  as  well 
as  the  petioles.  Stipules  short,  broad,  brown  and  scarious,  slightly  jagged. 
Scapes  exceeding  the  leaves,  often  1 to  l|ft.  high,  bearing  a loose  cyme  of  large 
white  flowers,  consisting  usually  of  2 or  8 racemose  branches,  rarely  reduced  to  a 
short  simple  raceme.  Sepals  about  ^in.  long.  Petals  twice  as  long.  Styles 


550 


XLVII.  DRORERACE.E. 


[ Drosera . 


usually  3,  divided  into  numerous  dichotomous  lobes,  some  very  short,  others 
longer,  clavate  or  forked  at  the  stigmatic  end.  Capsule  globular.  Seeds  very 
numerous,  small  and  linear. — DC.  Prod.  i.  319  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  3082  ; Planch,  in 
Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3,  ix.  206  ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  29  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  i.  59 ; 
D.  pedatn,  Pers.  Syn.  i.  337  ; DC.  Prod.  i.  319 ; D.  dichotoma,  Sm.  in  Rees’ 
Cyclop,  xii. 

Hab.:  Common  in  the  coastal  swamps  of  south  Queensland. 

The  species  is  also  in  New  Zealand.  The  Port  Jackson  specimens  have  the  leaves  usually 
dichotomous,  in  the  southern  ones  they  are  more  frequently  ‘2-lobed  only  ; but  these  differences 
are  by  no  means  constant,  and  the  two  forms  occur  sometimes  on  the  same  specimen. — Benth. 

9.  D.  auriculata  (auriculate),  Backh.:  Planch,  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3, 
ix.  295  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  465.  Bulbous,  with  a slender  stock.  Leafy  stem 
erect,  simple  or  slightly  branched,  ^ to  ljft.  high,  glabrous.  Lower  leaves  at  the 
summit  of  the  stock  either  all  reduced  to  short  linear  scales  or  forming  a small 
rosette,  with  orbicular  almost  reniform  or  peltate  laminte  and  short  petioles. 
Stem -leaves  scattered,  peltate,  broadly  crescent-shaped  or  at  least  truncate  on  one 
side,  the  2 angles  more  or  less  produced  into  glandular-ciliate  appendages,  the 
petiole  filiform.  Flowers  several,  white,  in  a terminal  simple  raceme.  Pedicels 
at  length  exceeding  the  calyx,  the  lower  ones  not  much  longer  than  the  others. 
Sepals  attaining  2 lines  or  rather  more  in  fruit,  glabrous,  entire  or  scarcely 
glandular-toothed.  Styles  divided  from  a little  below  the  middle  into  a dense 
tuft  of  short  dichotomous  linear  lobes.  Seeds  very  numerous,  narrow-linear,  the 
loose  testa  extending  beyond  the  nucleus  at  one  or  both  ends. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm. 
i.  30;  F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  i.  61. 

Hab.:  Southern  Queensland.  Flowering  in  March. 

Also  in  New  Zealand.  This  species  scarcely  differs,  except  in  the  seed,  from  those  forms  of 
D.  peltata  which  have  nearly  glabrous  sepals. — Benth. 

10.  D.  peltata  (leaves  peltate),  Sm.  in  Willd.  Spec.  PI.  i.  1546  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  465.  Bulbous,  with  a slender  rootstock.  Leafy  stem  erect  or 
flexuose,  ^ to  l^ft.  high.  Lower  leaves  at  the  summit  of  the  rootstock  usually 
rosulate,  orbicular  or  reniform,  not  peltate,  2 to  3 lines  diameter,  on  a broad 
petiole  often  longer  than  the  lamina  ; stem-leaves  peltate,  semiorbicular  or  broadly 
crescent-shaped,  on  slender  or  filiform  petioles.  Flowers  white,  in  loose  simple 
racemes.  Pedicels  usually  exceeding  the  calyx.  Sepals  attaining  about  2 lines, 
or  more  in  the  large-flowered  specimens,  ciliate- toothed,  and  more  or  less  clothed 
with  rather  long  soft  hairs.  Styles  short,  densely  dichotomous  from  below  the 
middle,  the  ultimate  branches  shortly  linear-clavate.  Seeds  very  numerous, 
small,  ovoid  or  globular,  the  testa  not  produced  beyond  the  nucleus. — Sm.  Exot. 
Bot.  i.  79,  t.  41 ; DC.  Prod.  i.  319 ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  30  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet, 
i.  60 ; D.  petiolaris,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.  (which  includes  also  D.  auriculata) ; D.  lunata, 
Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  54,  and  probably  also  Hamilt.  (Buchan.)  in  DC.  Prod.  i.  319. 

Hab.:  Southern  Queensland. 

Var.  gracilis.  Stems  slender.  Flowers  much  smaller. — D.  gracilis,  Hook.  f.  in  Planch.  Ann. 
Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3,  ix.  297,  and  FI.  Tasm.  i.  30,  t.  5.  This  form  is  represented  by  Labillardifere, 
PI.  Nov.  Holl.  t.  106,  f.  2. 

Yar.  foliosa.  Short  and  stout,  with  larger  leaves  and  fewer  flowers. — I),  foliosa,  Hook.  f.  in 
Planch.  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3,  ix.  298,  and  FI.  Tasm.  i.  30,  t.  6. 

The  species  appears  to  extend  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago  to  S.  China,  for  I can  find  no 
character  whatever  to  distinguish  the  common  D.  lunata,  Ham  , of  that  country.  The  rosulate 
leaves  are  indeed  less  frequently  present  at  the  time  of  flowering,  but  are  to  be  found  in  some 
specimens,  and  are  not  always  constant  in  the  Australian  ones.  The  sepals  and  styles  are  the 
same  in  both.— Benth. 

11.  D.  Banksii  (after  Sir  Joseph  Banks),  R.  Br.  in  DC.  Prod.  i.  319  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  469.  Stem  filiform,  leafy,  glabrous,  2 to  4in.  long,  very 
slender  at  the  base,  but  possibly  forming  a bulb  as  in  the  preceding  species. 
Leaves  all  scattered,  peltate,  orbicular,  on  slender  petioles,  the  lower  ones  with  a 


Drosera.] 


XLYII.  DROSERACE^E. 


551 


lamina  of  line  diameter,  on  a petiole  of  1 to  2 lines,  the  upper  ones  twice  as 
large  or  rather  more.  Stipules  to  some  of  the  upper  leaves  very  thin,  narrow, 
scarious  and  deciduous.  Flowers  few,  small,  in  a simple  raceme  like  the  smaller 
specimens  of  D.  peltata.  Pedicels  nearly  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Sepals  villous,  1 
to  1^  line  long.  Petals  spreading,  longer  than  the  calyx.  Styles  3,  divided  to 
the  base  into  2 deeply  3-fid  branches. — Planch,  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3,  ix.  291. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander. 


2.  ALDROVANDA,  Linn. 

(After  Ulysses  Aldrovandus.) 

Calyx  5-partite.  Petals  5,  hypogynous,  connivent  in  a cap.  Stamens  5, 
hypogynous.  Ovary  1-celled.  Styles  5,  with  terminal  branching  stigmas;  ovules 
numerous,  on  5 parietal  placentas.  Capsule  globose,  5-valved.  Seeds  numerous, 
broad,  oblong,  testa  black,  shining. — A weak  succulent  diaphanous  glabrous 
floating  herb  in  water.  Stems  articulate,  with  whorls  of  spathulate-orbicular 
leaves  at  the  nodes,  the  laminte  li  to  3 lines  diameter,  contorted,  bladdery. 
Flowers  pedunculate,  axillary,  solitary. — S.  B.  Clarke  in  Hook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind. 
ii.  425. 

A genus  of  a single  species  found  growing  in  still  water  in  central  Europe  and  East  India> 
besides  Queensland. 

1.  A.  vesiculosa  (bladdery),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  i.  319.  A swimming  and 
submerged  glabrous  plant,  stems  elongate,  branching.  Leaves  verticillate,  6 to  9 
in  a whorl,  inflated  at  the  end  so  as  to  form  a vesicle.  Petiole  flat  with  4 or  5 
bristles  at  the  extremity.  Flowers  white,  solitary  on  a long  slender  axillary 
peduncle. 

Hab.:  Swamps  about  Rockhampton,  P.  O’Shanesy  (F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  x.  79). 


3.  BYBLIS,  Salisb. 

(After  Byblys,  the  daughter  of  Miletus.) 

Calyx-segments  or  sepals  5.  Petals  5,  broad,  oblique,  united  in  a ring  at  the 
base,  contorted-imbricate.  Stamens  5,  hypogynous,  often  declinate ; anthers 
attached  by  the  base,  opening  at  the  end  in  oblong  pores  or  short  slits.  Ovary 
2-celled,  with  several  ovules  in  each  cell  attached  to  the  dissepiment ; style 
undivided,  with  a terminal  oblong  or  capitate  stigma.  Capsule  somewhat  com- 
pressed, 2-celled,  opening  in  2 valves,  bearing  the  dissepiment  in  their  centre. 
Seeds  oblong,  albuminous.  Herbs,  more  or  less  glandular-pubescent.  Leaves 
linear-subulate,  involute  in  vernation,  without  stipules.  Peduncles  axillary, 
bearing  a single  blue  flower. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  is  very  anomalous  in  the  Order,  with  which  it  is  chiefly 
connected  by  the  glandular  pubescence  and  the  leaves  involute  in  vernation.  The  flowers, 
especially  those  of  B.  gigantea  (W.  Australian  species),  have  a remarkable  resemblance  in 
structure  to  those  of  Cheiranthera  in  Pittosporea. — Benth. 


1.  B.  liniflora  (Flax-flowered),  Salisb.  Parad.  Lond.  t.  95 ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  470.  Glabrous  or  viscid  with  a glandular  pubescence,  sometimes 
copiously  so.  Stems  slender,  rarely  Gin.  high  and  often  only  2 or  Sin.  Leaves 
filiform,  1 to  2in.  long.  Peduncles  slender,  usually  exceeding  the  leaves.  Sepals 
lanceolate,  acute,  2 to  3 lines  long.  Anthers  varying  from  f line  to  1),  line  in 

Part  II.  Q 


55  2 


XLVII.  DROSERACEJE. 


[ Byblit. 


length,  the  filaments  longest  where  the  anthers  are  shortest. — DC.  Prod.  i.  819  ; 
Erull.  Iconogr.  t.  118  (incorrect  as  to  the  anthers)  ; B.  Jilifolia,  Planch,  in  Ann. 
Sc.  Nat.  ser.  8,  ix.  305. 

Hub.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Shoalwater  Bay,  II  Brown ; Port  Denison,  Herb.  F. 
Mueller;  Walsh  River,  T.  Bar  clay -Millar ; Cape  River,  E.  Bowman;  Rockingham  Bay,  W. 
E.  Armit. 

B.  ccerulea , Planch,  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3,  ix.  30G,  is  founded  on  Bauer’s  drawing  published 
by  Endlicher  of  R.  Brown’s  specimens,  in  which  the  short  anthers  are  represented  as  attached 
by  the  middle  of  the  back,  and  Planchon  thought  he  recognised  these  anthers  in  the  specimen 
glued  down  in  the  Banksian  herbarium.  The  excellent  specimens  in  Brown’s  own  herbarium 
show,  however,  that  this  is  a mistake.  The  anthers  are  often  as  short  as  figured  by  Bauer, 
sometimes  as  long  as  figured  by  Salisbury,  but  always  attached  by  the  base,  and  varying  much 
in  intermediate  lengths  in  different  specimens.  Benth. 


Order  XLYIII.  HALORAGE,®. 

Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary  ; lobes  2,  4 or  none,  or  rarely  3.  Petals  2,  4 or 
none,  valvate  induplicate  or  slightly  imbricate.  Stamens  2 to  8,  rarely  1 or  3; 
filaments  short  ; anthers  erect,  2-celled,  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  inferior, 
flattened  or  angular,  either  2 or  3 or  rarely  4-celled,  with  1 pendulous  ovule  in 
each  cell,  or  1-celled  with  1 to  4 pendulous  ovules  ; styles  as  many  as  ovules, 
quite  distinct,  with  papillose  or  plumose  stigmas.  Fruit  inferior,  small,  inde- 
hiscent,  with  1 to  4 cells  and  seeds  or  divisible  into  2 to  4 1 -seeded  indehiscent 
carpels.  Seeds  pendulous,  with  a membranous  testa  ; embryo  cylindrical,  in  the 
axis  of  a fleshy  albumen  ; radicle  long,  superior  ; cotyledons  small. — Herbs,  often 
aquatic,  or  undershrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  whorled  or  alternate,  without  stipules. 
Flowers  small,  often  unisexual  or  incomplete,  axillary  or  rarely  in  terminal 
corymbs  racemes  or  panicles. 

The  Order  is  dispersed  over  nearly  the  whole  globe.  All  three  Queensland  genera  have  a wide 
range. 

A.  True  Halorageae. — Flowers  with  petals,  at  least  in  the  males,  answering  to  the  ordinal 
characters  given  above. 

Petals,  at  least  in  the  males,  induplicate,  keeled.  Fruit  a nut-like  or  rarely 
spongy,  undivided  drupe.  Flowers  solitary  or  clustered  within  each  bract, 
along  the  rhachis  of  simple  or  paniculate  terminal  racemes.  Flowers  3 or 

4-merous 1.  Haloragis. 

Petals  in  the  males  imbricate.  Fruit  separable  into  2 or  4 nut-like  carpels. 

Aquatic  or  mud  plants 2.  Myriophyllum. 

B.  Anomalous  genera  of  a very  reduced  type  allied  to  Haloragese,  but  often  referred  to 
Monoehlamydese.  Flowers  unisexual. 

Perianth  none.  Flowers  with  or  without  2 bracteoles.  Stamen  1.  Ovary 
4-celled,  with  1 ovule  in  each  cell.  Styles  2.  Aquatic  or  mud  plant,  with 
opposite  entire  leaves 3.  Callitriche. 


1.  HALORAGIS,  Forst. 

(From  halo,  the  sea,  and  rax,  a grape-stone.) 

(Cercodia,  Murr.;  Goniocarpus,  Korn.) 

Calyx-tube  or  ovary  with  as  many  or  twice  as  many  nerves  as  lobes,  those 
alternating  with  the  lobes  occasionally  expanded  into  angles  or  wings  ; lobes  4, 
rarely  3 or  abnormally  5,  short.  Petals  as  many  as  calyx-lobes,  induplicate  and 
boat-shaped  or  hood-shaped,  deciduous,  often  wanting  in  female  flowers. 
Stamens  twice  as  many  as  petals  or  fewer,  those  opposite  the  petals  and  enclosed 
in  them  always  present  in  complete  or  male  flowers,  one  or  more  of  the  alternate 
ones  occasionally  wanting,  and  female  flowers  usually  without  any ; anthers 
oblong  or  linear,  deciduous ; filaments  short.  Ovary  2 to  4 or  rarely  5-celled, 
with  1 pendulous  ovule  in  each  cell ; styles  short  and  thick,  stigmatic  at  the  top, 


Haloragis.] 


XLVIIL  HALORAGEiE. 


553 


often  plumose  in  the  female  flowers.  Fruit  a small  2 to  4 or  rarely  5-celled  drupe 
or  nut,  the  adnate  calyx  either  smooth  or  variously  ribbed,  angled,  winged,  or 
muricate. — Herbs  or  undershrubs,  glabrous,  scabrous  or  hispid.  Leaves  alternate 
or  opposite,  entire  toothed  or  lobed.  Flowers  small,  solitary  or  several  together  in 
the  axils  of  the  floral  leaves  or  bracts,  forming  leafy  or  leafless  racemes,  either 
simple  or  in  a branching  terminal  panicle.  Pedicels  usually  very  short,  with  2 
small  opposite  often  deciduous  bracteoles  under  the  flower. 

The  genus  is  chiefly  Australian,  but  a few  species  are  also  found  in  New  Zealand,  in  Eastern 
Asia,  in  S.  Africa,  and  extratropical  S.  America.  The  characters  derived  from  the  ribs  and 
wings  of  the  fruit,  upon  which  the  genus  had  been  divided  into  three,  are  either  too  little  in 
accordance  with  other  distinctions,  or  too  variable  in  certain  species,  to  be  available  even  as 
sectional.  Most  of  the  species  are  monoecious,  the  female  flowers  variously  mixed  in  with  the 
males,  and  although  I have  frequently  had  specimens  with  the  flowers  all  of  one  or  the  other 
kind,  I have  not  been  able  to  ascertain  that  any  species  is  constantly  dioecious.  The  males  have 
never  plumose  stigmas,  but  I always  find  small  obtuse  styles  and  their  corresponding  ovules, 
which  appear  often  to  come  to  perfection.  The  females  have  usually  smaller  petals  or  none  at 
all,  fewer  stamens  or  none  or  filiform  filaments  only.  As  the  differences  between  the  two  are 
probably  the  same  in  nearly  all  the  species,  I have  not  alluded  to  them . in  the  specific 
characters. — Benth. 

Series  1.  Alternifoli®. — Leaves  all  alternate  or  rarely  here  and  there  irregularly 
opposite,  or  (in  some  specimens  of  H.  ceratophylla)  a few  of  the  lower  ones,  or  those  of  barren 
shoots  only,  opposite. 

Glabrous.  Leaves  narrow-lanceolate,  remotely  denticulate.  Fruit  winged  . 1.  H.  Gossei. 

Leaves  narrow-linear,  entire.  Densely  hirsute.  Fruit  ovoid,  muricate  . . 2.  H.  elata. 

Glabrous  or  scabrous.  Styles  and  ovules  4.  Leaves  nearly  sessile.  Flowers 

mostly  solitary.  Fruit  ovoid-globular,  often  muricate,  not  angled  . . . 3 . H.  ceratophylla. 

Series  2.  Oppositifolire. — Stem-leaves  all  opposite  or  rarely  the  uppermost  alternate 
Floral-leaves  or  bracts  alternate  or  rarely  the  lowest  opposite. 

Styles  and  ovules  4. 

Leaves  distinctly  petiolate,  lanceolate  or  oblong,  serrate.  Flowers 
mostly  clustered. 

Leaves  broadly  lanceolate  or  oblong.  Fruit  ovoid,  not  inflated,  terete 


or  4-winged 4.  H.  alata. 

Leaves  2in  long,  4 to  6 lines  broad.  Fruit  large,  4-celled,  pericarp 

spongy 5 . H.  Bauerlenii. 

Leaves  nearly  sessile.  Flowers  solitary,  or  rarely  2 together  (clustered  in 
H.  stricta). 

Glabrous  or  nearly  so.  Leaves  ovate  or  orbicular.  Flowers  minute,  in 

filiform  leafless  panicles 6.  H.  micrantha. 

Scabrous  or  hirsute. 

Leaves  linear  or  linear-lanceolate,  entire  or  with  small  distant  teeth  . 7.  H.  stricta. 

Lower  leaves  divided  into  narrow  linear  lobes.  Lobes  above  the 

middle  of  the  leaf  almost  digitate 8 . H.  heterophylla. 

Leaves  broadly  toothed  or  crenate. 

Leaves  oblong,  often  lin.  long.  Fruit  small,  narrow.  Bracts 

minute 9 . H.acantliocarpa. 

Leaves  ovate  or  oblong,  under  £in.  long,  narrowed  at  the  base. 

Fruit  small,  nearly  globular.  Upper  bracts  minute 10.  H.  tetragyna. 

Leaves  broadly  ovate,  rounded  or  cordate  at  the  base.  Fruit 

globular.  Bracts  exceeding  the  flower 11.  H.  teucrioides. 


Series  3.  Oppositiflorac. — Floral  leaves  and  flowers  all  or  nearly  all  opposite,  as  well  as 
the  stem  leaves.  Flowers  solitary  in  each  axil. 

Minutely  scabrous.  Leaves  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  small,  entire,  or 

slightly  toothed 12.  H.  depressa. 

1.  H.  Gossei  (after  — Gosse),  F.  v.  ill.  Fragm.  viii.  161  and  xi.  134.  An 
erect  glabrous  plant.  Leaves  scattered,  narrow-lanceolate,  remotely  denticulate 
or  here  and  there  laciniate ; the  lower  ones  about  lin.  long,  the  upper  ones 
gradually  shortening,  mostly  narrowing  to  a petiole.  Flowers  (female)  axillary, 
solitary  or  in  twos  or  threes.  Calyx  3-lobed,  rhomboid-ovate,  at  length  broad- 
renate,  rhombiform.  Petals  none  or  very  fugacious,  (male)  on  short  pedicels, 
3-cymbiform,  almost  1 line  long,  not  mucronulate.  Sepals  3,  cordate-rhombiform. 


554 


XLVIII.  HALORAGEiE. 


[Haloragis. 


Stamens  6 ; filaments  very  short.  Anthers  oblong-linear,  pale  yellow,  slightly 
shorter  than  the  petals.  Fruit  3-celled,  wings  (yellowish)  2 to  4 lines  long,  f to 
1A  line  broad,  rounded  at  the  extremities.  Seeds  almost  cylindric,  solitary  in 
each  cell. 

Hab.:  Recorded  for  Queensland  by  F.  v.  Mueller,  without  a locality. 

2.  H.  elata  (tall),  A.  Cunn.;  Fenzl,  in  Huey.  Enum.  45  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
476.  Rather  coarse,  with  erect  or  ascending  branches,  £ to  lift,  high,  hirsute 
with  spreading  hairs.  Leaves  alternate,  or  a few  very  rarely  irregularly  opposite, 
linear,  acutely  acuminate,  £ to  lin.  long,  with  revolute  margins,  entire  or  rarely 
with  a few  short  teeth,  the  floral  ones  smaller  but  mostly  exceeding  the  flowers. 
Flowers  solitary,  not  very  small,  in  terminal  racemes,  forming  a narrow  leafy 
panicle.  Calyx  hirsute,  the  lobes  not  cordate.  Petals  4,  ciliate  on  the  keel. 
Stamens  usually  8.  Styles  and  ovules  4.  Fruit  small,  ovoid,  prominently 
muricate. — Schlecht.  Linntea,  xx.  648. 

Hab.:  Recorded  for  Queensland  by  F.  v.  Mueller. 

3.  H.  ceratophylla  (leaves  horn-like),  Endl.  Atakta,  16,  t.  15;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  478.  Glabrous  and  glaucous  or  scabrous,  with  minute  rigid  hairs, 
rather  coarse  but  not  usually  tall,  the  decumbent  or  ascending  angular  stems 
rarely  exceeding  1ft.  Leaves  alternate  or  rarely  a few  of  the  lower  ones  or  those 
of  barren  side-shoots  opposite,  either  linear  or  linear-lanceolate  with  coarse 
distant  teeth  or  lobes,  or  shortly  pinnatifid,  or  sometimes  nearly  all  entire,  linear- 
oblong  and  obtuse,  usually  rather  thick,  with  very  scabrous  margins,  from  J to 
l|in.  long,  the  floral  ones  gradually  reduced  to  small  bracts.  Flowers  nearly 
sessile,  solitary  or  2 together,  usually  much  larger  than  in  H.  tctragyna  and  H. 
heterophylla,  in  long  terminal  racemes  leafy  at  the  base.  Calyx-lobes  lanceolate- 
triangular.  Petals  4,  about  1 line  long,  the  keel  scabrous-hirsute.  Stamens 
usually  8.  Styles  and  ovules  4 . Fruit  ovoid  or  globular,  much  larger  than  in 
H.  tetragyna,  scarcely  ribbed  but  sometimes  very  rugose  or  muricate. — H.  aspera, 
Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  306 ; H.  pinnatifida,  Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  119,  but 
not  of  A.  Gray. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River ; Rockhampton,  Dalluchy  ; Warwick,  Beckler ; St.  George,  Jos.  Wedd. 

I have  not  seen  authentic  specimens  of  Endlicher’s  plant,  but  the  figure  appears  to  me  to 
represent  this  species  rather  than  H.  lieterophylla,  which  is  also  in  R.  Brown’s  collection,  and  of 
which  some  coarse  specimens,  not  well  in  flower,  resemble  the  more  slender  ones  of  H. 
ceratophylla. — Benth. 

4.  H.  alata  (fruit  sometimes  winged),  Jacq.  Ic.  PI.  Piar.  i.  7,  t.  69  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  479.  A tall  erect  species,  apparently  glabrous,  but  scabrous  with 
minute  asperities  only  visible  under  a lens,  the  branches  acutely  angular.  Stem- 
leaves  opposite,  distinctly  petiolate,  from  ovate-lanceolate  to  oblong,  f to  1-J-in. 
long,  or  the  lower  ones  sometimes  twice  that  size,  regularly  and  sharply 
serrate,  the  floral  ones  mostly  alternate  and  small.  Flowers  shortly  pedicellate, 
clustered  and  drooping,  forming  terminal  racemes  leafy  at  the  base.  Calyx-lobes 
broad.  Petals  4,  about  1 line  long,  glabrous.  Stamens  8.  Styles  and  ovules  4. 
Fruit  rather  small,  globular  or  ovoid,  with  4 ribs  scarcely  prominent  in  most  of 
the  Australian  specimens,  smooth  or  rugose  between  the  ribs. — Hook.  f.  FI.  N.Z. 
i.  62  ; Cercodia  erecta,  Murr.;  D.C.  Prod.  iii.  67. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River. 

Also  in  New  Zealand  and  in  the  island  of  Juan  Fernandez. — Benth. 

5.  H.  Bauerlenii  (after  W.  Bauerlen),  F.  v.  M.  Trans.  Pioy.  Soc.  Viet. 
xxiv.  133.  A tall  shrub  with  glabrous  spreading  branches,  the  smaller  ones 
quadrangular  and  of  a reddish  tinge.  Leaves  opposite,  attaining  2in.  in 
length  and  4 to  6 lines  in  breadth,  flat,  gradually  narrowed  into  an  acute  apex, 


Ilalorayis.  J 


XLVIII.  HALORAGEjE. 


555 


on  some  shoots  pinnatilobed.  Pedicels  axillary,  solitary  or  perhaps  racemose 
when  near  the  ends  of  the  branches,  2 of  the  calyx-lobes  deltoid,  the  2 others 
dilated,  or  truncate-rhomboid  ; tube  when  fruit-bearing  expanded  into  4 broadish 
conspicuously  veined  membranes,  of  these  on  each  side  of  the  somewhat  com- 
pressed tube  2 approximated.  Styles  4,  very  short  ; stigmas  beardless.  Fruit 
rather  large,  4-celled  ; pericarp  spongy. 

Hab.:  Recorded  for  Queensland  by  F.  v.  Mueller. 

6.  H.  micrantha  (small-flowered),  R.  Brown  in  Flind.  Toy.  App.  550  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  482.  Glabrous  or  slightly  scabrous,  much  branched  and 
diffuse  or  slender  and  erect,  usually  under  6in.  high,  but  when  very  luxuriant 
twice  that  height,  the  greater  part  occupied  by  the  panicle.  Stem-leaves  opposite, 
orbicular-cordate  or  very  broadly  ovate,  serrate-crenate,  3 to  4 lines  or  rarely  Jin. 
diameter,  the  floral  ones  reduced  to  minute  alternate  bracts.  Racemes  filiform, 
in  a loose  terminal  panicle.  Flowers  minute,  solitary.  Calyx-lobes  short,  not 
cordate.  Petals  4,  about  J line  long.  Styles  and  ovules  4.  Fruit  small,  nearly 
globular,  prominently  8-nerved,  otherwise  smooth  and  shining.— Hook.  f.  FI. 
Tasm.  i.  121  ; H.  tenella,  Brongn.  in  Duperr.  Voy.  t.  68  B ; Goniocarpus 
micrantlius,  Thunb.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  66;  G.  microcarpus,  Thib.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  66 
(from  the  diagnosis). 

Hab.:  Common  in  southern  Queensland. 

Also  in  New  Zealand,  Khasia,  and  Japan. — Benth. 

7.  H.  Stricta  (straight — plant  erect),  B.  Br.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
482.  Erect,  rigid  but  slender,  rather  tall,  nearly  glabrous  in  appearance  but  very 
scabrous.  Stem-leaves  opposite,  linear  or  linear-lanceolate,  acute,  entire  or  with 
small  distant  teeth,  the  larger  ones  1 to  2in.  long,  the  floral  ones  alternate, 
mostly  reduced  to  small  bracts.  Flowers  clustered  within  each  bract,  shortly 
pedicellate,  forming  slender  terminal  racemes  leafy  at  the  base.  Calyx-lobes 
small,  acute.  Petals  4,  about  1 line  long.  Stamens  8.  Styles  and  ovules 
(according  to  R.  Brown’s  notes)  4.  Fruit  small,  but  not  seen  ripe. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  it.  Brown  (Herb.  R.  Br.) ; Rockingham  Bay. 

8.  H.  heterophylla  (various-leaved),  Brongn.  in  Duperr.  Voy.  t.  68  A ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  483.  A rather  slender  species,  usually  small  but  sometimes  1ft. 
high,  glabrous  or  minutely  scabrous,  with  erect  or  ascending  stems.  Stem-leaves 
all  or  mostly  opposite,  deeply  divided  above  the  middle  into  3,  5 or  7 linear  or 
rarely  lanceolate  acute  lobes  almost  digitate  ; a few  of  the  upper  ones  often 
alternate  linear  entire  or  nearly  so,  the  floral  ones  smaller,  the  uppermost  reduced 
to  small  bracts.  Flowers  like  those  of  H.  tetragyna,  small,  solitary  or  2 together 
within  each  bract,  in  slender  terminal  leafy  racemes.  Calyx  scabrous,  with  short 
lobes.  Petals  4,  in  the  males  oblong,  boat-shaped,  about  1 line  long,  present  also 
in  some  of  the  females,  but  shorter  and  hood -shaped.  Styles  and  ovules  4. 
Fruit  small,  globular  or  nearly  so,  tubercular-rugose. 

Hab.:  Keppel  Bay,  R.  Brown;  Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart; 
Warwick,  Beckler ; and  many  other  localities  in  south  Queensland. 

Generally  speaking,  this  species  is  readily  distinguished  from  H.  ceratophylla  by  its  slender 
habit,  opposite  stem-leaves  only  divided  above  the  middle,  and  by  the  small  flowers  of  H. 
tetragyna;  but  some  specimens,  mostly  in  an  imperfect  state,  appear  almost  to  connect  the 
two. — Benth. 

9.  H.  acanthocarpa  (fruit  spiny),  Brongn.  in  Duperr.  Voy.  t.  70  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  483.  Stems  decumbent  or  erect,  1 to  2ft.  long,  scabrous-hirsute  as 
well  as  the  leaves.  Stem-leaves  opposite,  sessile  or  shortly  petiolate,  oblong  or 
broadly  lanceolate,  or  sometimes  broad-ovate,  obtuse,  mostly  f to  Hin.  long, 
regularly  and  acutely  serrate  as  in  H.  alata,  rounded  at  the  base.  Flowers  very 
small,  alternate  along  the  filiform  branches  of  a long  loose  terminal  panicle,  with 


556 


XLVIII.  HALORAGE^L 


[Haloragis. 

small  leaves  at  the  base  of  the  primary  branches,  the  others  reduced  to  small 
bracts.  Calyx-lobes  short.  Petals  4,  glabrous,  rather  above  f line  long.  Stamens 
8.  Styles  and  ovules  4.  Fruit  nearly  1 line  long,  narrow-oblong,  muricate  with 
2 or  8 transverse  rows  of  tubercles,  crowned  by  the  small  smooth  calyx-limb. — 
H.  lepthotheca,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  32,  viii.  162. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  It.  Broivn ; Gould  Island,  M‘Gillivray  ; Kockingham 
Bay,  J.  Dallachy. 

10.  H.  tetragyna  (four  styles),  Hook.  f.  FI.  Nov.  Zel.  i.  63,  and  FI.  Tasm. 

i.  120  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  484.  Rootstock  apparently  perennial,  more  or  less 
scabrous  with  appressed  hairs ; stems  branching,  diffuse  decumbent  or  ascending, 
sometimes  all  under  6in.,  rarely  above  1ft.  long.  Stem-leaves  all  or  mostly 
opposite,  linear-lanceolate,  elliptical  or  the  lower  ones  ovate,  rarely  above  fin. 
long,  except  in  tall  luxuriant  forms,  not  cordate,  and  usually  narrowed  at  the 
base ; the  floral  ones  all  or  almost  all  alternate  and  mostly  reduced  to  small 
bracts  shorter  than  the  flowers.  Flowers  small,  nearly  sessile,  solitary  within 
each  bract,  in  slender  usually  one-sided  terminal  racemes,  often  branching  into 
narrow  panicles.  Calyx-tube  not  f line  long.  Petals  in  the  males  rather  above  1 
line  long,  smaller  or  none  in  the  females.  Stamens  8.  Styles  and  ovules  4. 
Fruits  nearly  globular,  4-angled,  transversely  rugose,  attaining  about  f line 
diameter.— F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  26 ; Goniocarpus  tetragynus,  Labill.  PL  Nov. 
Holl.  i.  39,  t.  53  ; DC.  Prod.  iii.  66;  Haloragis  gonocarpus,  Spreng.  Syst.  ii.  261  ; 
Goniocarpus  tenellus,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  66. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart;  many  southern  localities. 

Var.  glabrescens.  This  western  plant  differs  from  the  several  other  forms  in  beiDg  nearly  or 
quite  glabrous.  The  stem-angles  are  smooth ; the  leaves  large,  bordered  by  distant  prominent 
teeth  and  serrulate  between  them.  The  flowers  are  larger  than  in  other  forms.  Hab.:  Dan- 
River,  C.  W.  de  Burgh  Birch  ; Diamantina,  Dr.  Thos.  L.  Bancroft ; Georgina. 

Var.  micrantha.  Leaves  longer  than  in  the  southern  specimens,  and  mostly  lanceolate ; 
racemes  more  slender  and  more  branching,  flowers  nearly  as  small  as  in  H.  micrantha.  To  this 
belong  most  of  the  northern  specimens,  and  Goniocarpus  scaber,  Keen.  (Haloragis  scabra,  Benth. 
FI.  Hongk.  139),  from  Khasia,  the  Indian  Archipelago,  and  China,  appears  not  to  be  specifically 
distinct.  Hab.:  Stanthorpe. 

Var.  hispida.  More  hirsute.  Flowers  small.  Leaves  rather  broad,  but  all  narrowed  at  the 
base. 

The  southern  form  of  the  species  is  also  in  New  Zealand. 

11.  H.  teucrioides  (Teucrium-like),  A.  Gray,  Bot.  Amer.  Expl.  Exped.  i. 
625  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  484.  A perennial,  usually  much  coarser  than  H. 
tetragyna,  scabrous-pubescent  or  hispid  with  decumbent  or  erect  stems  often  1 to 
2ft.  long.  Stem-leaves  opposite,  ovate  or  orbicular,  deeply  and  acutely  serrate, 
rounded  or  cordate  at  the  base,  the  larger  ones  fin.,  but  mostly  not  above  fin. 
long  and  broad.  Flowers  rather  larger  than  in  H.  tetragyna,  solitary  under  each 
bract,  the  lower  ones  often  opposite,  the  upper  ones  alternate,  forming  much 
shorter  racemes  and  a much  more  leafy  panicle  than  H.  tetragyna,  all  the  bracts 
usually  exceeding  the  flowers.  Fruit  of  H.  tetragyna,  but  the  angles  usually 
tuberculate  and  smoother  between  them. — Goniocarpus  teucrioides,  DC.  Prod.  iii. 
66 ; H.  elata,  Hook.  f.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  vi.  475,  not  of  A.  Cunn.;  H. 
Gunnii,  Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  120. 

Hab..  Southern  Queensland  ; not  common. 

12.  H.  depressa  (depressed  growth),  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  99  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 

ii.  485.  A small  species,  diffuse  or  prostrate,  very  much  branched,  glabrous  in 
appearance,  but  scabrous  with  minute  asperities.  Leaves  all  opposite,  ovate, 
often  cordate,  usually  broad,  under  fin.  and  often  not  fin.  long,  the  upper  floral 
ones  gradually  smaller,  but  all  opposite  or  very  rarely  the  upper  ones  of  side- 


Haloragis.] 


XLVIII.  HALORAGE/E. 


55  ? 


branches  alternate.  Flowers  almost  sessile,  forming  short  interrupted  terminal 
racemes,  and  similar  to  those  of  the  smaller  forms  of  H.  tetragyna,  except  that 
the  calyx-tube  and  fruit  are  smooth  and  shining,  with  4 or  8 prominent  nerves, 
not  tuberculate. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  120. 

Hab.:  Southern  Queensland. 

Also  in  New  Zealand. 

There  are  two  forms  of  this  species  : 1.  serpyllifolia.  Leaves  mostly  under  3 lines  long  and 
rather  narrow. — Goniocarpus  serpyllifolius  and  G.  vernicosus.  Hook.  f.  in  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t.  290  and 
311,  H.  serpyllifolia  and  H.  vernicosa,  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  90  ; — and  2.  Montana.  Leaves  broader, 
often  cordate,  3 to  5 lines  long. — H.  Montana , Hook.  f.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  vi.  475,  united 
with  H.  depressa  in  FI.  Tasm.  i.  120. — Benth. 


2.  MYRIOPHYLLUM,  Linn. 

(From  my  Has,  a myriad,  and  phyllon,  a leaf.) 

Flowers  mostly  unisexual.  Male  flower  : Calyx-tube  very  short  or  scarcely 
any,  lobes  short,  petal-like  or  scarcely  any.  Petals  4,  concave,  imbricate  or  half 
induplicate.  Stamens  4,  6 or  8.  Styles  minute  and  rudimentary,  without  any 
ovules.  Female  flower  : Calyx-tube  ovoid,  lobes  minute  or  none.  Petals  usually 
none.  Ovary  2 or  4-celled,  with  one  pendulous  ovule  in  each  cell ; styles  as 
many  as  ovules,  usually  short  and  stigmatic  from  the  base,  often  plumose.  Fruit 
small,  usually  furrowed  between  the  2 or  4 carpels,  which  at  length  separate  into 
as  many  small  1 -seeded  nuts.  Aquatic  herbs,  the  lower  leaves  when  submerged 
often  pinnately  divided  into  capillary  lobes  ; those  of  the  flowering  extremities 
usually  less  divided  or  entire.  Flowers  very  small,  in  the  axils  of  the  exserted 
flowering  leaves  or  rarely  also  or  entirely  in  the  submerged  axils,  the  upper  ones 
usually  males,  the  lower  ones  females,  sometimes  dioecious,  but  perhaps  not 
constantly  so  in  any  species. 

The  genus  is  found  in  fresh  waters  nearly  in  every  part  of  the  globe. 

Leaves  all  in  whorls  of  3 to  8,  the  submerged  ones  pinnatisect  with  capillary 
segments,  the  emerged  floral  ones  entire  toothed  or  shortly  lobed. 

Leaves  usually  more  than  4 in  the  whorl,  the  emerged  ones  narrow- 


linear.  Calyx-lobes  conspicuous 1.  M.  varice. folium. 

Leaves  usually  4,  the  emerged  ones  oblong  or  broadly  lanceolate,  pin- 
natifid,  sessile.  Calyx-lobes  minute.  Plant  small  or  slender  ...  2.  M.  verrucosum. 

Leaves  usually  3,  the  emerged  ones  linear-lanceolate,  above  Jin.  long, 

serrulate,  narrowed  into  a petiole 3.  M.  latifolium. 

Leaves  all  alternate,  pinnatisect  with  fine  segments.  Stamens  8.  Carpels  4 4.  3/.  gracile. 


1.  1VE.  variaefolium  (various-formed  leaves),  Hook.  f.  in  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t. 
289,  and  FI.  Tasm.  i.  122  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  487.  Usually  a rather  large  species. 
Leaves  in  whorls  of  from  4 to  8,  usually  5 or  6,  the  lower  submerged  ones 
divided  into  capillary  lobes,  the  emerged  floral  ones  narrow-linear,  all  entire  or 
the  lower  ones  toothed,  J to  above  ^in.  long.  Male  flowers  : Calyx-lobes  con- 
spicuous and  sometimes  above  J line  long.  Petals  1J  to  1|-  lines.  Stamens  8. 
Female  flowers  small  without  apparent  calyx-teeth  or  petals.  Carpels  4,  small, 
tuberculate  or  almost  echinate,  or  rarely  quite  smooth. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  and  other  southern  localities. 

Also  in  New  Zealand. 

2.  m.  verrucosum  (warted  fruit),  Lindl.  in  Mitch.  'Prop.  Austr.  384  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  488.  Usually  much  smaller  and  more  slender  than  the  last 
species.  Leaves  mostly  in  whorls  of  4,  the  lower  submerged  ones  divided 
into  capillary  lobes,  the  emerged  floral  ones  sessile,  oblong  or  lanceolate,  all 
pinnatifid  with  short  obtuse  lobes,  more  or  less  glaucous,  mostly  about  2 lines 
long.  Calyx-lobes  very  small,  but  perceptible  in  both  sexes,  very  deciduous  in 


558 


XLVIII.  HAL0RAGEA5. 


[Myriophyllum. 


the  females.  Petals  in  the  males  under  1 line  long,  btamens  8.  Females 
without  petals.  Styles  4,  very  short.  Carpels  4,  rarely  above  \ line  long, 
obtuse  on  the  back,  more  or  less  tuberculate. 

Hab.:  Mount  Elliott.  E.  Fitzalan  (F.  v.  M.) ; Balonne  River  at  St.  George’s  Bridge,  Mitchell ; 
Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart;  common. 

The  species  has  some  affinity  to  the  northern  M.  verticillatum  as  well  as  to  the  Asiatic  M. 
indicum,  but  beside  the  differences  in  the  floral  leaves,  the  fruit  is  much  smaller  than  in  the 
former,  much  less  furrowed  between  the  carpels  than  in  the  latter.  As  in  the  allied  species, 
flowers  are  occasionally  found  also  in  the  axils  of  the  submerged  leaves. — Benth. 

8.  IKE.  latifolium  (broad-leaved),  F.  v.  M.  Fraipn.  ii.  87  ; Benth.  Bl.  Austr.  ii. 
488.  A large  species.  Leaves  in  whorls  of  8 or  sometimes  4,  the  lower  sub- 
merged ones  divided  into  capillary  lobes,  those  of  the  tall  erect  emerged 
summits  lanceolate,  serrulate,  f to  lin.  long,  narrowed  into  a petiole.  Flowers 
rather  large,  all  sessile.  Male  flowers  : Calyx-lobes  small.  Petals  1J  line  long. 
Stamens  8.  Female  flowers  : Calyx-teeth  inconspicuous.  Carpels  4.  Styles 
short,  very  plumose.  Fruit  scarcely  exceeding  a line,  somewhat  acute  and 
verruculose. 

Ilab.:  Brisbane  and  other  southern  localities;  Rockhampton,  M.  A.  Tliozet. 

4.  M,  gracile  (a  slender  plant),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  488.  A small  slender 
almost  filiform  species.  Leaves  alternate,  all,  even  the  uppermost  floral  ones, 
deeply  pinnatifid  or  pinnatisect,  with  few  (3,  5 or  7)  narrow,  rather  short  lobes. 
Flowers  small,  solitary,  the  upper  ones  males,  calyx-teeth  very  small.  Petals 
under  1 line  long.  Stamens  in  the  males  8.  Carpels  4,  small,  tuberculate. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller ; and  other  southern  localities. 


3.  CALLITRICHE,  Linn. 

(From  kalar,  beautiful,  and  thrix,  a hair.) 

Flowers  unisexual,  without  any  perianth,  the  males  consisting  of  a single 
stamen,  with  a conspicuous  filament  and  small  4-celled  anther,  the  females  of  a 
sessile  or  stalked  4-celled  ovary,  with  2 filiform  erect  or  recurved  styles,  stigmatic 
from  the  base  ; ovules  1 in  each  cell,  laterally  suspended  from  near  the  summit 
of  the  cell.  Fruit  small,  more  or  less  flattened,  notched  at  the  top,  4-celled  and 
4-lobed  (that  is,  surrounded  by  a double  edge),  the  edges  obtuse,  acute  or  winged, 
and  consisting  of  two  2-celled  disk-shaped  carpels,  united  by  their  inner  faces. 
Embryo  in  the  axis  of  an  oily  albumen. — Slender  aquatic  herbs.  Leaves 
opposite,  entire.  Flowers  axillary,  solitary  or  a male  and  female  from  the  same 
axis,  each  one  between  two  small  bracteoles,  which  are  sometimes  wanting. 

The  genus  is  found  in  almost  every  part  of  the  globe,  and,  according  to  some  botanists, 
consists  but  of  a single  species;  others  divide  it  into  two,  the  Australian  one  belonging  in  that 
case  to  the  one  which  has  the  most  universal  geographical  range.  Those  who  variously  extend 
the  genus  to  from  13  to  20  species  describe  the  commonest  Australian  form  as  endemic. — Benth. 

1.  C.  verna  (a  spring  plant),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  70  ; Bcntli.  FI.  Austr.  ii. 
492.  A glabrous  slender  perennial,  either  floating  in  water  or  creeping  and 
rooting  in  mud,  flowering  young  so  as  to  appear  annual,  varying  in  length 
according  to  the  depth  of  the  water.  Leaves  either  all  obovate-orbicular  or 
oblong,  1 to  6 lines  long  or  the  lower  submerged  ones  narrow-linear  and  obtuse 
or  notched  at  the  end,  the  upper  ones  obovate  and  spreading  in  little  tufts  on  the 
surface  of  the  water,  or  all  submerged  and  linear.  Flowers  minute.  Fruit  from 
i to  1 line  diameter,  with  obtuse  acute  or  winged  edges. — C.  autumnalis,  Linn.; 
DC.  l.c.,  partly  at  least. 

Hab.:  Common  on  damp  land  and  in  pools  of  still  fresh  water  of  southern  Queensland. 


XLIX.  RHIZOPHOREiE. 


559 


Order  XLIX.  RHIZOPHORE® 

Calyx-tube  usually  adnate  to  the  ovary,  sometimes  prolonged  above  it  or  rarely 
quite  free  ; the  limb  of  4 to  about  12  lobes,  valvate  in  the  bud.  Petals  as  many 
as  the  calyx- lobes,  alternate  with  them,  notched  cut  or  jagged  or  rarely  entire, 
the  margins  usually  induplicate  and  embracing  the  anthers.  Stamens  as  many 
or  twice  as  many  as  petals  or  more,  inserted  with  them  at  the  base  of  the  free 
part  or  lobes  of  the  calyx  ; anthers  erect  or  versatile,  2-celled,  opening  longitudi- 
nally. Ovary  more  or  less  inferior  or  rarely  quite  superior,  2 or  more-celled,  with 
2 or  few  pendulous  ovules  in  each  cell,  or  rarely  1 -celled  by  the  obliteration  of  the 
partition ; style  undivided,  with  an  entire  or  lobed  stigma.  Fruit  inferior  or 
enclosed  in  the  calyx.  Seeds  solitary  or  few,  with  or  without  albumen. — Trees 
or  shrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  simple,  entire  or  slightly  toothed,  coriaceous. 
Stipules  often  large,  very  deciduous.  Flowers  solitary,  clustered  or  in  cymes. 

A small  Order,  almost  entirely  tropical,  and  chiefly  Asiatic  or  African,  with  a few  American 
species.  The  four  Queensland  genera  are  all  Asiatic,  one  only  extending  also  to  Africa  and 
America.  The  Order  is  divided  into  two  distinct  tribes,  by  some  considered  .as  independent 
families: — 1.  Rhizophoreee  proper , including  the  following  genera:  Rhizophora , Ceriops,  and 
Bruguiera,  consists  of  the  Mangroves,  all  maritime  evergreen  trees,  the  seeds  without  albumen, 
and  almost  always  germinating  before  falling  off,  the  thick  radicle  enlarging  rapidly,  and  pro- 
truding to  a great  length  from  the  summit  of  the  capsule.  2.  Legnotidece,  trees  or  shrubs,  not 
strictly  maritime,  with  usually  smaller  flowers,  and  the  seeds  albuminous,  not  germinating 
before  they  fall.  To  this  tribe  belongs  the  genus  Carallia. — Benth. 

Tribe  I.  Xthizophoreae. — Leaves  opposite , stipulate.  Ovary  inferior;  style  single. 
Embryo  exalbuminous,  macropodous,  germinating  while  the  fruit  is  still  on  the  tree. 

Calyx-segments  longer  than  the  tube.  Seeds  without  albumen,  germinating 
before  falling. 

Calyx  segments  and  petals  4.  Stamens  8 to  12.  Fruit  more  than  half 

superior 1.  Rhizophora. 

Calyx-segments  and  petals  5 or  6.  Stamens  twice  as  many.  Fruit  more 
than  half  superior 2.  Ceriops. 

Calyx-segments  and  petals  8 to  15.  Stamens  twice  as  many.  Fruit  inferior  3.  Bruguiera. 

Tribe  II.  Iieg'notideae. — Leaves  opposite,  stipulate.  Ovary  half-inferior  or  superior,  but 
adnate  to  the  base  of  the  calyx  ; style  single.  Embryo  immersed  in  fleshy  albumen. 

Calyx  campanulate,  with  short  teeth.  Petals  5 to  8.  Stamens  twice  as  many. 

Fruit  inferior.  Seeds  albuminous,  not  germinating  before  falling  ....  4.  Carallia. 


1.  RHIZOPHORA,  Linn. 

(Root-bearing.) 

Calyx-tube  adnate,  segments  4.  Petals  4,  entire.  Stamens  8 to  12  ; filaments 
short ; anthers  long,  acuminate,  connivent.  Ovary  half-inferior,  2-celled,  with  2 
pendulous  ovules  in  each  cell ; style  filiform  ; stigma  2-toothed.  Fruit  ovoid  or 
conical,  the  persistent  calyx-segments  reflexed  from  near  the  base.  Seed  solitary, 
without  albumen,  the  rapidly  enlarged  radicle  penetrating  through  the  summit  of 
the  fruit. — Trees.  Leaves  entire.  Cymes  axillary. 

The  genus  consists  of  a few  species  only,  ranging  over  tropical  seacoasts. 

1.  R.  mucronata  (mucronate),  Law.-,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  32  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  493.  “ Binaroley,”  Forest  Hill,  Macartney.  A glabrous  evergreen  tree,  with 

thick  branches.  Leaves  from  broadly  ovate  to  oblong-elliptical,  obtuse,  with  a 
projecting  point  (often  worn  off  from  the  old  leaves),  3 to  4in.  long  in  the 
Australian  specimens,  but  sometimes  longer  and  narrower,  coriaceous,  entire. 
Stipules  rather  large,  oblong,  obtuse,  very  deciduous.  Flowers  in  axillary 
dichotomous  cymes  shorter  than  the  leaves,  with  a pair  of  short  thick  concave 
bracts,  connate  at  the  base  under  each  fork  and  under  each  flower.  Calyx  sessile 
within  the  bracts,  about  iin.  long,  the  segments  separating  down  to  the  adnate 


560 


XLIX.  RHIZOPIIORE^E. 


[ Rhizophora . 


part.  Petals  shorter  than  the  calyx,  the  induplicate  margins  fringed  with  long 
hairs.  Anthers  8,  nearly  sessile,  4 embraced  by  the  petals,  4 between  them. 
Style  rather  thick,  nearly  as  long  as  the  petals.  Fruit  ovoid,  1 to  ljin.  long. — 
Arn.  in  Ann.  Nat.  Hist.  i.  362  ; Wight.  Ic.  t.  238. 

Hab.:  Shores  and  islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Eussell  River ; along 
the  coast  and  islands  within  the  tropics,  R.  Brown,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others. 

The  species  extends  over  the  tropical  shores  of  Africa  and  Asia. — Bentli. 

Wood  of  a light  colour,  with  reddish  centre  or  heartwood,  the  grain  close,  tough. — Bailey’s 
Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  156. 

The  bark  is  used  in  India,  and  said  to  yield  from  18  to  20%  of  tannin. 

The  aborigines  about  Port  Curtis  consider  the  honey  of  the  native  bee  to  be  poisonous  when 
collected  near  Mangrove  swamps. 


2.  CERIOPS,  Arn. 

(Horn-like.) 

Calyx-tube  adnate  ; segments  5,  rarely  6.  Petals  as  many,  emarginate  and 
usually  with  1 or  more  clavate  setas  at  the  top.  Stamens  twice  as  many  as 
petals  ; filaments  filiform,  longer  than  the  oblong  or  linear  anthers.  Ovary  half- 
inferior, 3-celled,  with  2 pendulous  ovules  in  each  cell  ; style  filiform  ; stigma 
undivided.  Fruit  ovoid  or  conical,  the  persistent  calyx-segments  surrounding  it 
below  the  middle.  Seed  solitary,  without  albumen,  the  rapidly  enlarged  funicle 
penetrating  through  the  summit  of  the  fruit. — Trees  or  shrubs,  with  the  habit 
and  inflorescence  of  Rhizophora,  but  usually  with  smaller  leaves  and  smaller  more 
numerous  flowers. 

A small  genus,  limited  to  the  tropical  seacoasts  of  the  Old  World,  the  Australian  species  being 
the  commonest  one  in  Asia.  Although  the  genus  appears  to  be  universally  adopted,  it  can 
scarcely  be  considered  as  more  than  a section  of  Rliizopliora. — Benth. 

1.  C.  Candolleana  (after  De  Candolle),  Arn.  in  Ann.  Nat.  Hist.  i.  364  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Anstr.  ii.  494.  “ Larchanama,”  Batavia  River,  Roth.  A tall  ever- 

green glabrous  shrub  or  small  tree.  Leaves  obovate  or  broadly  oblong,  to  2in. 
or  in  luxuriant  specimens  3in.  long,  coriaceous,  entire.  Flowers  in  small  dense 
almost  capitate  cymes,  on  short  recurved  axillary  peduncles,  with  a pair  of  small 
short  thick  concave  bracts  under  each  ramification,  and  rather  larger  ones  under 
each  flower.  Calyx  sessile  within  the  bracts,  about  3 lines  long,  divided  down  to 
the  adnate  part.  Petals  shorter  that  the  calyx,  emarginate,  with  2 to  5 clavate 
setae  irregularly  placed  in  the  notch  or  on  the  lobes.  Stamens  alternately  inserted 
opposite  the  petals  and  between  them,  but  the  anthers  embraced  in  pairs  by  the 
induplicate  margins  of  the  petals.  Fruit  conical,  about  ^in.  long. — Wight,  Ic.  t. 
240 ; Rhizophora  Timoriensis,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  32. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  N.E.  coast,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Russell  River,  and  mainland. 

The  species  extends  over  the  seacoasts  of  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago. — Benth. 

Wood  a dark-brown  colour,  close-grained,  hard  and  tough. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  157. 

Bark  used  for  tanning  in  India. 

Broad  expanded  roots  made  into  canoe  blades. — Roth  lx. 


3.  BRUGUIERA,  Lam. 

(After  J.  G.  Bruguieres.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate  or  campanulate,  adnate  at  the  base  to  the  ovary,  the 
upper  portion  free,  lined  by  the  disk  ; lobes  10  to  15  or  rarely  8 or  9,  narrow  and 
thick.  Petals  as  many,  2-lobed,  with  or  without  setae  at  the  top.  Stamens  twice 
as  many  as  petals  ; anthers  linear,  but  usually  shorter  than  the  filaments.  Ovary 
inferior,  2 to  4-celled,  with  2 pendulous  ovules  in  each  cell  ; style  filiform,  with  2 
to  4 minute  stigmatic  lobes.  Fruit  turbinate,  crowned  by  the  persistent  calyx- 


Bruguiera.  j 


XLIX.  RHIZOPHOREiE. 


561 


lobes.  Seeds  solitary,  without  albumen,  the  rapidly  enlarged  radicle  penetrating 
through  the  summit  of  the  fruit. — Trees,  with  the  habit  of  Rhizophora.  Flowers 
solitary  or  few  together,  on  short  axillary  recurved  peduncles. 

The  genus  is  widely  spread  along  the  tropical  seacoasts  of  the  Old  World.  The  four  Australian 


species  are  also  common  Asiatic  ones. — Benth. 

Flowers  solitary,  lin.  long. 

Petals  with  several  set®  at  the  end 1.  B.  Rheedii. 

Petals  without  set®  at  the  end 2.  B.  gymnorrhiza. 

Peduncles  3-flowered.  Calyx  about  8-cleft.  Petals  ciliate  from  base  to 

apex  ; set®  3 to  4 and  1 in  the  notch 3.  B.  caryopliylloides. 

Peduncles  many-flowered.  Calyx  about  8-cleft.  Petals  with  5 set®  . . 4 B.  parvijiora. 


1.  B.  Rheedii  (after  H.  V.  Rheede),  Blume,  Emm.  PI.  Jav.  92  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.n.  494.  Red  Mangrove  or  Orange  Mangrove.  “ Kowinka,”  Stradbroke 
Island,  Watkins;  “Biree,”  Bundaberg,  Keys;  “ Bam-bir,”  Cooktown,  Roth : 
“ Tcherda,”  Batavia  River,  Roth.  A glabrous  evergreen  tree.  Leaves  ovate  or 
oblong-elliptical,  very  shortly  acuminate,  3 to  5in.  long,  narrowed  into  a rather 
long  petiole,  coriaceous.  Stipules  oblong,  1 to  2in.  long,  very  deciduous.  Flowers 
solitary,  on  short  recurved  axillary  peduncles,  without  bracts.  Calyx  very  thick 
and  rigid,  from  a little  more  than  lin.  to  1^-in.  long,  the  narrow  turbinate  tube 
about  one-third  the  whole  length,  the  angles  scarcely  prominent  or  sometimes 
quite  obscure,  the  lobes  usually  about  12,  but  variable  in  number.  Petals  shorter 
than  the  calyx,  densely  hairy  at  the  base,  and  the  induplicate  margins  more  or 
less  hairy  to  the  end  ; set*  usually  1 in  the  notch  and  3 or  4 at  the  end  of  each 
lobe.  Anthers  embraced  in  pairs  by  the  induplicate  margins  of  the  petals. 
Ovary  very  short  and  wholly  inferior.  Fruit  at  first  crowned  by  the  calyx-limb, 
which  often  falls  off  as  the  radicle  protrudes,  the  latter  assuming  a narrow  spindle- 
shaped  form,  obscurely  notched,  with  about  6 prominent  angles.- — Arn.  in  Ann. 
Nat.  Hist.  i.  367 ; B.  australis,  A.  Cunn.  in  Arn.  l.c. ; B.  Rheedii  and  B.  Rumphii, 
Blume,  Mus.  Bot.  i.  138. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  Henne ; Shoal  Bay  passage,  R.  Brown ; along  the 
coast  from  Moreton  Bay  to  Torres  Straits,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others  ; Bussell 
River. 

Wood  of  a light  colour,  close-grained,  tough  and  nicely  marked  ; useful  for  many  purposes, 
especially  as  axe  and  pick  handles. 

The  bark  is  said  to  contain  about  19%  of  tannin. 

Fruit  prepared  for  eating.  Timber  from  flat  roots  used  for  oar  blades. — Roth  l.c. 

Wight’s  figure  of  B.  Rheedii,  Ic.  t.  239  A,  as  well  as  his  specimens,  differ  in  some  slight 
respects,  and  are  considered  by  Blume  as  constituting  a distinct  species.  The  set®  of  the 
petals  appear  to  be  pretty  constant  in  the  Australian  specimens,  but  it  remains  to  be  proved 
how  far  their  presence  and  number  are  really  good  specific  characters. — Benth. 

2.  B.  gymnorrhiza  (naked-rooted),  Lam.;  Blume,  Mus.  Bot.  i.  136  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  495.  An  evergreen  tree,  closely  resembling  B.  Rheedii.  Leaves 
usually  smaller.  Flowers  as  in  that  species,  solitary  on  short  recurved  axillary 
peduncles,  but  smaller,  varying  from  f to  nearly  lin.  in  length.  Calyx-tube 
marked  with  very  prominent  acute  angles  ; lobes  usually  8 to  10.  Petals  shorter 
that  the  calyx,  hairy  on  the  margins,  the  lobes  obtuse,  without  setae,  but  a very 
short  seta,  often,  although  not  always,  in  the  notch  between  them. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  R.  Brown,  and  other  parts  of  the  northern  coast. 

3.  B.  caryophylloides  (claw-like),  Blume,  Fnum.  PI.  Jav.  93.  A small 
tree.  Leaves  oblong  to  oblong-lanceolate,  acuminate  at  both  ends,  scarcely 
coriaceous.  Peduncles  equalling  the  petioles,  1 to  5 usually  3-flowered  buds 
sub-acute,  pedicelled.  Calyx-tube  small,  smooth,  about  8-cleft  ; lobes  linear, 
sub-acute,  about  £in.  reflexed  and  half  the  length  of  the  tube  in  fruit.  Petals 


562 


XLIX.  RHIZOPHORE/E. 


[Bntguiera. 


ciliate  from  the  base  to  apex,  nearly  erect,  bifid,  bearing  3 to  4 bristles  and  1 in 
the  notch.  Calyx-tube  obtuse  at  the  base,  not  ribbed.  Ovary  2-celled.  Fruit 
about  iin.,  urceolate,  slightly  constricted  below  the  calyx-limb. — FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii. 
488. 

Hab.:  Cape  Sidmouth,  Dr.  Curdia  (F.  v.  M.). 

4.  B.  parviflora  (flowers  small),  W.  and  Am.  [’rod.  i.  311.  A tropical 
coast  swamp  tree  of  small  size,  glabrous  except  the  petals.  Leaves  oblong  or 
broadly  lanceolate,  2 to  over  Sin.  long,  tapering  towards  the  petiole,  which  is 
rather  slender  and  about  £in.  long.  Stipules  about  l^in.  long.  Flowers  small, 
pedicellate  in  a once  or  twice  trichotomous  cyme.  Calyx-tube  prominently  ribbed, 
tapering  towards  the  base ; lobes  8,  lanceolate,  erect,  rigid,  and  scarcely  over  1^ 
line  long.  Petals  shorter  than  the  calyx-lobes,  cleft,  with  a bristle  in  the  sinus 
and  with  3 or  more  at  the  apex  of  each  of  the  lobes,  the  incurved  sides  hairy 
where  they  embrace  the  stamens.  Ovary  3-celled,  ribbed.  Fruit  sub-cylindrical, 
about  lin.  long  according  to  Hooker’s  Flora  of  British  India,  but  not  sent  with 
the  Queensland  specimens. 

Hab.:  Johnstone  River,  Dr.  Thou.  L.  Bancroft;  Mackay,  H.  L.  Griffith. 

Wood  a light-straw  colour,  close  in  grain,  and  hard. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  157a. 

4.  CARALLIA,  Roxb. 

(From  Carallie,  its  Indian  name.) 

Calyx-tube  adnate  at  the  base,  campanulate  above  the  ovary,  lined  by  the  thin 
disk,  with  5 to  8 very  short  lobes  or  teeth.  Petals  as  many  as  calyx-lobes, 
clawed,  orbicular,  jagged  or  slightly  toothed.  Stamens  twice  as  many  as  petals, 
inserted  with  them  at  the  base  of  the  calyx-lobes  round  the  undulated  margin  of 
the  disk.  Ovary  inferior  or  adnate  as  high  as  the  insertion  of  the  ovules, 
4-celled  or  rarely  3 or  5-celled,  with  two  pendulous  ovules  in  each  cell.  Fruit 
succulent,  globular.  Seed  solitary,  with  a copious  albumen  ; embryo  curved, 
not  growing  before  the  seed  falls. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Flowers  small,  in  axillary, 
pedunculate,  usually  trichotomous  cymes. 

A small  genus,  extending  over  tropical  Asia,  the  Australian  species  the  commonest  over  the 
the  whole  range  of  the  genus. — Benth. 

1.  C.  integerrima  (leaves  quite  entire),  DC.  Prod.  iii.  33  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  495.  “ Mel-joor-ang  ” and  “ Bokor,”  Cooktown,  “ Bil-be-a,”  Musgrave, 

Both.  Usually  a tree,  often  large,  glabrous  in  all  its  parts.  Leaves  sessile, 
obovate,  elliptical  or  oblong,  in  the  Australian  specimens  obtuse  or  obtusely 
acuminate,  thinly  coriaceous,  3 to  5in.  long,  in  Asiatic  ones  very  variable  in 
breadth  and  consistence,  and  often  very  obtuse  or  much  acuminate.  Cymes 
axillary  or  from  old  leafless  nodes,  on  short  peduncles,  each  short  branch  bearing 
3 to  5 sessile  flowers.  Calyx  shortly  and  broadly  campanulate,  not  3 lines 
diameter.  Fruit  red,  globular,  about  3 lines  diameter,  crowned  by  the  short 
connivent  teeth  of  the  calyx. — Benth.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  74,  with  the 
synonyms  there  adduced;  C.  zeylanica,  Arn.;  Wight,  Illustr.  t.  CO. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  R.  Brown,  and  many  other  parts  of  the  tropical  coast. 

Widely  spread  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago,  extending  to  S.  China. 

Wood  light-coloured,  but  darkening  towards  the  centre ; close  in  grain,  and  easy  to  work. — 
Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  159a. 


Order  L.  COMBRETACEiE. 

Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base,  narrowed  above  it  and  sometimes 
elongated  ; limb  usually  campauulate,  with  4 or  5,  rarely  more,  teeth  lobes  or 
segments,  valvate  or  very  rarely  induplicate  or  imbricate.  Petals  none  or  as 


L.  COMBRETACEtE. 


563 


many  as  calyx-lobes,  usually  small,  imbricate  or  valvate.  Stamens  as  many  or 
twice  as  many  as  calyx-lobes,  rarely  indefinite,  inserted  on  the  calyx  ; anthers 
opening  in  longitudinal  slits  or  (in  Gyrocarpea ) in  2 valves.  Ovary  inferior, 
1 -celled,  with  2 or  more  pendulous  ovules,  or  (in  Gyrocarpcat)  with  1 only  ; style 
filiform  or  scarcely  any,  with  an  entire  terminal  stigma.  Fruit  coriaceous,  char- 
taceous  or  drupaceous,  indehiscent  (except  in  a few  species  not  Australian).  Seed 
solitary,  pendulous,  without  albumen  ; cotyledons  convolute  or  folded,  very  rarely 
flat  inside  and  furrowed  outside  ; radicle  short,  superior. — Trees  shrubs  or  woody 
climbers.  Leaves  alternate  or  opposite,  entire,  without  stipules.  Flowers  in 
axillary  or  terminal  racemes  spikes  or  heads,  or  (in  Gyrocarpecc)  in  cymes.  Bracts 
usually  small  ; bracteoles  sometimes  larger,  often  wanting. 

The  Order  is  distributed  over  the  tropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World,  a very  few 
species  extending  beyond  the  tropics  in  S.  Africa  or  in  N.  India.  Of  the  four  Australian  genera, 
three  are  common  to  America,  Africa,  and  Asia,  one  of  them  restricted  to  seacoasts,  the  fourth  is 
endemic. — Benth. 

Suborder  I.  Combreteae.  — Calyx-lobes  valvate.  Stamens  without  g lands  or  staminodes  at 
their  base  ; anthers  dehiscing  by  a longitudinal  slit.  Ovules  2 to  7,  suspended  by  long  funicles. 
Flowers  racemose  or  spicate. 

Anthers  opening  in  slits.  Ovules  2 or  more.  Flowers  in  racemes,  spikes, 
or  heads. 

Calyx-tube  not  produced  above  the  ovary.  Petals  none.  Stamens  10  . 1.  Terminalia. 

Calyx-tube  produced  above  the  ovary.  Petals  5.  Stamens  10  or  fewer. 

Bracteoles  small.  Ovules  2 to  5.  Maritime  shrubs 2.  Lumnitzera. 

Bracteoles  enlarged  and  forming  wings  to  the  fruiting-calyx.  Ovules 

10  to  12.  Silky  or  tomentose  shrubs 3.  Macropteranthes. 

Suborder  II.  G-yrocarpeae. — Calyx-lobes  valvate  or  imbricate.  Stamens  with  glands  or 
staminodes  at  their  base ; anthers  opening  by  recurved  lateral  valves.  Ovule  1,  suspended  by  a 
short  funicle.  Flowers  cymose. 

Anthers  opening  in  2 valves.  Ovules  solitary.  Flowers  small,  in  cymes. 

Petals  none 4.  Gyrocarpus. 


1.  TERM  IN  ALIA,  Linn. 

(Leaves  usually  at  the  end  of  the  branches.) 

(Chuncoa,  Ruiz  and  Pav.) 

Calyx-tube  not  produced  above  the  ovary ; limb  campanulate  or  urceolate, 
5-cleft.  Petals  none.  Stamens  10,  longer  than  the  calyx.  Style  filiform. 
Ovules  2,  rarely  3.  Fruit  ovoid,  terete,  angular,  compressed  or  with  2 or  (in 
species  not  Australian)  3 to  5 longitudinal  wings.  Cotyledons  convolute. — Trees 
or  erect  shrubs.  Leaves  alternate  or  rarely  opposite,  usually  marked  with  minute 
pellucid  dots,  often  only  visible  under  a strong  lens.  Flowers  hermaphrodite  or 
polygamous,  small,  green,  white  or  rarely  coloured,  sessile  in  loose  spikes,  rarely 
contracted  into  dense  heads,  either  axillary  or  clustered  on  the  old  nodes.  Calyx- 
tube  usually  small  and  narrow,  the  limb  much  broader. 

The  genus  extends  over  nearly  the  whole  range  of  the  Order,  but  is  most  abundant  in  Africa 
and  Asia.  The  Australian  species  appear  to  be  all  endemic,  with  the  exception  of  T.  Catappa 
and  T.  microcarpa.  Several  of  them,  however,  are  as  yet  insufficiently  known.  They  are  often 
not  to  be  distinguished  without  the  fruit,  which,  when  succulent  and  not  winged,  is  rarely 
perfect  in  herbarium  specimens,  and  we  do  not  as  yet  know  how  far  the  fruit  may  vary  in  the 
same  species.  Some  with  broadly  winged  fruits  have  precisely  the  foliage  and  flowers  of  others 
which  have  wingless  fruits.  The  circumscription  of  species  here  given  may  therefore  require 
much  revision  when  more  perfect  materials  are  obtained. — Benth. 

The  subdivision  of  the  genus  into  sections,  or  with  some  botanists  into  distinct  genera,  has 
been  founded  on  the  fruit  alone,  and  although  the  line  of  demarcation  is  often  very  indefinite, 
no  better  character  has  as  yet  been  found.  The  Australian  species  are  included  in  Chuncoa, 
with  2 or  3 distinct  wings  to  the  fruit,  Catappa  with  2 wings,  confluent  above  and  below  so  as 
completely  to  encircle  the  drupe,  and  Myrobalanus  without  wings ; but  in  T.  volucris  the  wings 
are  often  slightly  confluent  so  as  to  do  away  with  all  real  distinction  between  Chuncoa  and 


564 


L.  C0MBRETACBJ5. 


[Terminalia . 


Catappa,  and  even  between  that  and  Myrobalanus,  the  acute  angles  of  the  fruit  of  T.  melunocarpa 
almost  pass  into  the  wings  of  Catappa.  The  section  Pentaptera,  with  4 or  5 wings  to  the  fruit, 
is  as  yet  unknown  in  Australia.  Among  the  following  species,  several  are  only  known  from  very 
imperfect  specimens,  and  may  henceforth  require  much  correction  in  their  circumscription, 
although  I do  not  think  that  they  will  be  much  reduced  in  number.— Benth. 


Sect.  I.  Catappa. — Fruit  with  2 longitudinal  membranous  or  coriaceous  wings,  or  rarely,  in 
the  first  3 species,  with  a third  narrow  wing  or  prominent  nerve. 


Fruit,  including  the  wings,  much  broader  than  long. 

Fruit,  including  the  wings,  three  times  as  broad  as  long  ; wings  quite 

distinct.  Leaves  velvety-pubescent  underneath 1.2’.  platyptera. 

Fruit,  including  the  wings,  not  twice  as  broad  as  long  ; wings  often 
confluent  above  and  below.  Leaves  nearly  glabrous.  Spike 
slender,  interrupted. 

Leaves  obovate,  much  reticulate.  Fruit-wings  scarcely  confluent  . 2.  T.  volucris. 

Leaves  cuneate-oblong,  much  reticulate.  Fruit-wings  shortly 

confluent 3.  T.  oblongata. 

Fruit,  including  the  wings,  rather  longer  than  broad  and  quite  sur- 
rounded by  the  confluent  wings. 

Leaves  lanceolate  or  oblong,  silky-pubescent.  Spikes  elongated,  dense. 

Fruits  under  Jin.  long 4.  T.  bursarina. 

Leaves  lanceolate  or  oblong,  mostly  silky-pubescent.  Spikes  short, 

dense.  Fruits  j to  above  lin.  long 5.  T.  circumalata. 

Fruit  orbicular,  quite  surrounded  by  a narrow  wing.  Leaves  obovate, 

much  reticulate,  glabrous.  Spikes  slender 6.  T.  Thozetii. 

Fruits  1 to  2in.  long,  ellipsoid,  slightly  compressed  so  as  to  show  two 
ridges.  Leaves  on  very  short  petiole,  obovate  from  a cordate  but  very 
narrow  base.  Spikes  solitary,  axillary 7.  T.  Catappa, 


Sect.  II.  Myrobalanus  (from  the  Greek  muron,  ointment,  and  balanos,  any  glandular 
fruit). — Fruit  globular  or  more  frequently  ovoid,  terete  or  slightly  compressed,  or  surrounded  by 
a prominent  acute  angle,  but  not  distinctly  winged. 

(There  is  no  difference  whatever  in  inflorescence  or  flowers  in  the  two  sections,  and  no  constant 
one  in  foliage,  although  in  general  there  is  a greater  tendency  to  dry  black  in  Myrobalanus 
than  in  Catappa,  and  the  primary  veins  diverging  from  the  midrib  are  more  prominent,  parallel, 
and  distinct. — Benth.) 

Leaves  very  obtuse,  usually  broad.  Flowers  rather  small.  Stamens  not 
above  3 lines  long. 

Leaves  quite  glabrous,  large,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole. 

Calyx-tube  white,  with  appressed  hairs.  Drupe  glabrous,  sur- 
rounded by  a very  prominent  angle 8.  T.  melanocarpa. 

Calyx-tube  quite  glabrous.  Drupe  ovoid,  without  any  angle  . . . 9.  T.  Muclleri. 

Leaves  loosely  tomentose-pubescent,  at  least  underneath. 

Drupe  ovoid,  glabrous 10.  T.  porphyrocarpa. 

Drupe  ovoid  or  oblong,  often  acuminate,  tomentose 11.  T.  platyphylla. 

Leaves  mostly  shortly  acuminate.  Flowers  rather  small.  Stamens  not 
above  3 lines  long. 

Leaves  obovate,  cuneate  at  the  base,  on  short  petioles.  Flowers  small. 

Stamens  very  short,  yellow.  Fruit  silky,  slightly  compressed,  with 


angular  margins 12.  T.  sericocarpa. 

Leaves  ovate,  three  or  four  times  as  long  as  the  petiole,  the  pellucid 

dots  very  conspicuous  under  a lens 13.  T.  microcarpa. 

Leaves  narrow,  obtuse.  Flowers  large.  Stamens  5 to  6 lines  long  . . 14.  T.  grandiflora. 


1.  T.  platyptera  (broad-winged),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  151  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  498.  A tree,  the  young  branches  and  petioles  hoary-pubescent  or  almost 
velvety.  Leaves  crowded  at  the  ends  of  the  flowering  branches,  obovate  or 

obovate- oblong,  very  obtuse,  1J  to  2J-in.  long,  on  a rather  long  petiole, 
velvety-pubescent  on  both  sides  when  young,  at  length  nearly  glabrous 
above,  the  reticulate  veins  prominent.  Spikes  tomentose,  slender,  interrupted, 
exceeding  the  leaves.  Calyx  softly  tomentose  inside  and  out,  the  adnate  tube 
about  as  long  as  the  broad  campanulate  limb  ; lobes  short  and  broad.  Filaments 


Terminalia.] 


L.  COMBRE  T ACE  M . 


565 


glabrous.  Style  villous.  Fruit  2-winged,  tomentose-pubescent,  about  lin.  long 
and  3in.  broad,  including  the  horizontally  divaricate  wings,  which  are  quite 
distinct,  broadly  obovate,  plicately  veined. 

Hab.:  Etheridge  and  Palmer  Rivers,  Batho. 

Wood  of  a light-yellow  colour,  close-grained  and  hard. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  160. 

Var.  (?)  glabrata.  Minutely  hoary  or  nearly  glabrous  ; leaves  more  coriaceous  and  rather 
larger.  Gilbert  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. — Benth. 

2.  T.  volucris  (the  fruit  winged),  Herb.  R.  Br.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  498. 
Branches  divaricate,  the  young  shoots  very  minutely  hoary  or  silky-pubescent. 
Leaves  from  broadly  obovate  to  oval-elliptical,  14  to  3in.  long,  narrowed  at  the 
base  and  often  decurrent  on  the  rather  long  petiole,  thin,  pale  underneath,  the 
primary  veins  more  numerous  and  less  oblique  than  in  T.  pterocarpa,  which  this 
species  resembles  without  the  fruit,  and  much  and  finely  reticulate  between  them. 
Spikes  slender,  interrupted,  usually  longer  than  the  leaves,  especially  when  the 
flowers  are  chiefly  males,  the  more  female  spikes  shorter  and  denser.  Calyx 
minutely  pubescent,  the  broad  limb  as  long  as  the  ovary.  Disk  villous.  Fila- 
ments glabrous.  Style  glabrous  or  hairy  at  the  base.  Fruit  2-winged,  about  fin. 
long  and  twice  that  breadth,  including  the  broad  wings,  which  are  either  distinct 
or  slightly  continuous  above  or  below  the  drupe  or  both  ; there  are  also  frequently 
on  one  face  of  the  drupe  1 or  2 prominent  longitudinal  angles. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown  ; Sweers  Island,  Henne. 

R.  Brown’s  specimens  are  the  only  ones  in  good  fruit,  and  are  those  alluded  to  by  him  in  the 
Appendix  to  Flinders’  Voyage  under  the  name  of  Chuncoa.  I have  little  doubt  of  A.  Cunning- 
ham’s and  F.  v.  Mueller’s  specimens  belonging  to  the  same  species ; the  others  are  very 
imperfect. — Bentli. 

Some  specimens  from  Broadsound  and  Endeavour  River,  R.  Brown,  without  fruit,  appear  to 
belong  to  the  same  species. — Benth. 

Var.  (?)  coriacea.  Leaves  larger,  broader,  more  coriaceous  ; spikes  long ; lowest  bracts  some- 
times leafy. — Benth. 

3.  T.  oblongata  (oblong  leaves),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  152  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 

ii.  499.  “ Yananoleu,”  North  Queensland,  Tliozet.  A small  tree  with  spreading 

branches,  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  minutely  hoary-pubescent.  Leaves  often 
clustered  at  the  old  nodes  or  on  the  short  branchlets,  cuneate-oblong,  very  obtuse 
or  emarginate,  1 to  2 or  rarely  3in.  long,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole,  thin  and 
much  reticulate.  Spikes  slender,  interrupted,  shortly  exceeding  the  leaves. 
Calyx  minutely  hoary-pubescent  outside,  very  hairy  inside.  Stamens  and  style 
glabrous,  not  3 lines  long.  Fruit  2-winged,  about  8 to  9 lines  long  and  twice  as 
broad,  including  the  wings,  which  are  very  shortly  continuous  both  above  and 
below  the  drupe  ; drupe  in  the  centre  flattened  on  one  face,  the  other  with  a 
projecting  longitudinal  angle  sometimes  dilated  into  a third  narrow  wing. 

Hab.:  Fitzroy,  Suttor,  Dawson,  and  Burdekin  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Rockhampton,  Tliozet. 

Wood  light-coloured  and  nicely  marked  ; suitable  for  cabinet  work. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods 
No.  161. 

T.  grandijlora  has  much  the  foliage  of  this  species,  but  the  flowers  are  much  larger  and  the 
fruit  is  not  winged. — Benth. 

4.  T.  bursarina  (resembling  a Bursaria),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  149;  Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  499.  A shrub  or  small  tree,  the  young  branches  and  foliage  softly 
silky-pubescent.  Leaves  usually  crowded,  mostly  narrow-oblong  or  lanceolate, 
obtuse,  1 to  lfin.  long,  but  occasionally  passing  into  obovate  or  ovate,  narrowed 
into  a short  petiole,  the  primary  veins  very  oblique  and  reticulate  between  them. 
Spikes  pedunculate,  dense,  exceeding  the  leaves  and  sometimes  3 to  4in.  long, 
the  rhachis  and  flowers  softly  silky.  Calyx-tube  about  1 line  long,  the  limb  about 
as  long,  not  so  broad  and  more  deeply  divided  into  narrower  lobes  than  in  the 


5GG 


L.  COMBRETACEiE. 


[Terminalia. 


allied  species.  Drupe,  according  to  F.  v.  Mueller,  2 or  rarely  3-winged,  rather 
longer  than  broad,  2i-  to  4 lines  long,  3-angled,  the  one  face  larger  than  the  other, 
and  furnished  in  the  centre  with  a prominent  blunt  spur. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Gulf  country,  Frank  Hann. 

Wood  dark-coloured,  close-grained,  hard  and  prettily  marked  ; useful  for  cabinet  work. — 
Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  l(51a. 

5.  T.  circumalata  (winged  all  round),  F.  v.  il/.  Fragm.  iii.  91  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  499.  Closely  allied  to  T.  pterocarpa,  with  the  same  flowers  and  fruit, 
and  perhaps  a narrow-leaved  variety  with  the  foliage  and  inflorescence  more  or 
less  clothed  with  a soft  silky  pubescence.  Leaves  oblong-cuneate  or  elliptical, 
1 to  2 or  sometimes  nearly  3in.  long,  with  very  oblique  primary  veins,  the 
reticulate  veinlets  few  and  scarcely  prominent.  Flowers  very  silky,  crowded  in 
short  pedunculate  spikes.  Fruits  including  the  wings,  obovate,  f to  above  lin. 
long,  the  drupe  entirely  surrounded  by  a continuous  wing. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown.  May  belong  to  T.  circumalata,  but  are 
not  in  fruit. — Bentli. 

G.  T.  Thozetii  (after  M.  A.  Thozet),  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  500.  Said 
to  resemble  T.  volucris  in  foliage,  except  that  it  is  perfectly  glabrous 
(sometimes  the  leaves  are  velvety  on  the  under  side,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm. 
ix.  160),  and  the  fruit  is  very  different.  Leaves  narrow- obovate,  crowded 
at  the  ends  of  the  branches,  2 to  3in.  long,  reticulate  as  in  T.  volucris. 
Flowers  not  seen.  Fruiting-spikes  slender,  glabrous.  Fruits  quite  smooth  and 
glabrous,  nearly  orbicular,  about  Ain.  diameter  including  the  two  narrow  confluent 
wings,  which  completely  encircle  the  drupe.  They  may  not,  however,  be  perfectly 
ripe  in  the  specimen. 

Hab.:  Rockhampton,  Thozet. 

7.  T.  Catappa  (its  Molucca  name),  Linn.  “ Tom-min,”  Cooktown,  Both. 
Country  Almond.  A tree  of  about  80ft.,  the  branches  in  horizontal  whorls. 
Leaves  alternate,  clustered  at  the  ends  of  the  branches,  on  very  short  petioles, 
obovate  from  a cordate  but  very  narrow  base,  6 to  Sin.  long,  deciduous,  usually 
softly  hairy  when  young,  sometimes  becoming  glabrous  in  age,  with  2-glandular 
depressions  near  the  base  of  the  midrib  on  the  under  side,  these  sometimes 
wanting ; petiole  3 to  9 lines  long.  Spikes  solitary,  axillary,  simple,  grey  or  rusty 
tomentose  or  pilose,  the  upper  flowers  male,  the  lower  hermaphrodite.  Bracts 
minute.  Calyx-teeth  glabrous,  or  nearly  so,  within  and  without.  Young  ovary 
glabrous  or  hairy.  Fruit  yellow,  ellipsoid,  slightly  compressed  so  as  to  show  two 
ridges,  1 to  2in.  long,  epicarp  fleshy.— Wight  Ic.  172;  Bot.  Mag.  3004;  Bedd. 
FI.  Sylv.  t.  18  ; Catappa  domestica,  litorea,  and  syloestris,  Rumph.  Herb.  Amboin. 
i.  t.  68  ; Badamia  Commersonii,  Gfertn.  Fruct.  ii.  97  ; Rheede  Hort.  Mai.  iv.  t.  3,  4. 

Hab.:  From  Rockingham  Bay  northwards  on  the  coast;  abundant  on  the  islands  of  Torres 
Straits. 

The  wood  of  the  Queensland  tree  I have  not  had  worked  up.  J.  S.  Gamble,  however,  in 
Manual  of  Indian  Timbers  described  it  as  red,  with  a lighter-coloured  sapwood,  hard,  and  says 
that  the  kernels  of  the  nuts  are  eaten  as  dessert,  and  the  bark  and  leaves  give  a black  dye.  It  is 
one  of  the  trees  on  the  leaves  of  which  the  “ Tasar”  or  “ Katkura”  silkworm  (Anthercea  Pctphia) 
is  fed. 

8.  T.  melanocarpa  (black  fruit),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  92;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  500.  A tree,  usually  glabrous,  except  the  silky-white  young  buds 
and  the  flowers.  Leaves  obovate,  very  obtuse  or  rarely  obscurely  and  very 
obtusely  acuminate,  3 to  6 or  even  bin.  long  and  sometimes  above  Gin.  broad, 
narrowed  into  a short  petiole,  coriaceous,  the  primary  veins  prominent  under- 
neath and  rather  distant,  transversely  reticulate  between  them.  Spikes  loose, 
about  as  long  as  the  leaves,  the  rbachis  nearly  glabrous.  Flowers  numerous  but 


Terminating 


L.  COMBRETACEjE. 


567 


not  crowded.  Calyx-tube  or  ovary  white  with  appressed  hairs ; limb  nearly 
glabrous  outside,  above  2 lines  broad,  densely  woolly  inside.  Stamens  and  style 
glabrous.  Drupes  ovoid,  somewhat  compressed,  obtuse  or  acuminate,  about  lin. 
long,  surrounded  usually  by  a prominent  acute  angle,  which  sometimes  in  the 
dried  state  almost  assumes  the  appearance  of  a narrow  thick  wing,  but  in  other 
specimens  is  scarcely  prominent. 

Hab.:  Snapper  Island,  A.  Cunningham,;  Port  Denison  and  Edgecombe  Bay,  Fitzalan, 
Dallachy ; and  many  other  localities  in  the  tropics. 

Wood  of  a light-yellow,  close-grained,  hard  and  tough. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  162. 

9.  T.  Muelleri  (after  Baron  von  Mueller),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  500. 
“ Eandi,”  Batavia  River,  Ward.  A small  tree  in  the  scrub  with  a blackish 
rough  bark,  growing  to  a considerable  height  in  the  ranges,  glabrous  or  the  young 
buds  minutely  silky.  Leaves  undistinguishable  from  those  of  T.  melanocarpa, 
broadly  obovate,  obtuse,  usually  8 to  4in.  long,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole, 
rather  coriaceous,  the  primary  veins  prominent  underneath  and  rather  distant. 
Spikes  loose  as  in  T.  melanocarpa,  flowers  rather  larger,  and  the  calyx-tube  as 
well  as  the  limb  glabrous  outside.  Drupe  ovoid,  said  to  be  blue  when  fresh  and 
rather  acid,  about  fin.  long,  without  wings  or  angles. — T.  microcarpa,  F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  iii.  92,  not  of  Decaisne. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Howick’s  Group  and  off  Cape  Bedford  and  Cape  Flattery,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; 
Cape  York,  M'Gillivray  ; Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallachy  ; Rockingham  Bay. 

Wood  yellow,  pinkish  towards  the  centre ; tough  and  light ; suitable  for  axe-handles. — 
Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  163a. 

Var.  minor.  Leaves  narrower.  Fruit  smaller. — T.  glabra,  R.  Br.  Herb.,  but  scarcely  of 
Roxb. — Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander ; islands  of  Carpentaria  (no  fruit),  R.  Brown. 


10.  T.  porphyrocarpa  (purple-fruited),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  Fi.  Austr. 
ii.  501.  A handsome  tree,  the  young  branches  and  petioles  densely  tomentose. 
Leaves  crowded  on  the  short  branchlets,  obovate,  2 to  3in.  long,  on  petioles  rarely 
exceeding  -|in.,  loosely  and  softly  tomentose-pubescent  on  both  sides  or  becoming 
glabrous  above  when  old,  the  primary  veins  prominent  underneath.  Spikes 
usually  shorter  than  the  leaves,  rather  dense.  Calyx  glabrous  outside,  the  adnate 
tube  about  1^  line  long,  the  limb  fully  2 lines  diameter,  densely  woolly  inside. 
Fruit  ovoid,  glabrous,  without  wings  or  angles,  said  to  be  blue  or  purple. 

Hab.:  Mount  Archer,  Rockhampton,  Dallachy ; Fitzroy  River,  Boxcman. 

Wood  of  a yellow  colour,  nicely  marked,  close-grained,  hard  and  tough  ; useful  for  house- 
building and  cabinet  work. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  163c. 

Var.  (?)  eriantha.  Ovary  and  calyx  densely  silky-tomentose. — Mount  Archer,  Dallachy. 
These  specimens  are  in  flower  only,  and  resemble  in  foliage  T.  platyptera  as  much  as  T. 
porphyrocarpa,  but  have  the  larger  flowers  of  the  latter  species. — Benth. 

11.  T«  platyphylla  (broad-leaved),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  150;  Benth. 

FI.  Austr.  ii.  502.  “ Durin,”  Flinders  River,  F.  Palmer.  A moderate-sized 

tree,  the  young  branches  and  petioles  more  or  less  hoary  or  rusty  with  a short 
soft  tomentum  or  sometimes  densely  tomentose  and  almost  woolly.  Leaves 
broadly  obovate  or  ovate,  very  obtuse,  4 to  6in.  long,  2 to  4in.  broad,  shortly 
narrowed  into  a petiole  never  exceeding  lin.  in  some  specimens,  rather  longer  in 
others,  coriaceous,  softly  pubescent  on  both  sides  or  nearly  glabrous  above. 
Spikes  usually  shorter  than  the  leaves  with  numerous  rather  small  flowers,  loose 
or  crowded.  Calyx  silky-pubescent  or  villous  outside,  densely  villous  inside. 
Drupes  tomentose,  ovoid  or  oblong,  obtuse  or  acuminate,  not  winged. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  Flinders  River,  E.  Palmer;  Thursday 
Island. 

The  species  appears  to  be  chiefly  distinguished  amongst  other  large  obtuse-leaved  ones  by  its 
soft  pubescence  and  by  the  tomentose  drupes.  From  the  few  specimens  seen,  the  latter  appear 
to  be  variable  in  shape.  In  R.  Brown’s  specimens  they  are  ovoid-oblong,  obtuse,  often  surrounded 
by  a slightly  prominent  or  obscure  angle ; in  one  of  F.  v.  Mueller’s  from  Roper  River  they  are 


Part  II.  R 


568 


L COMBRETACEiE. 


[Terminalia. 


obliquely  acuminate,  with  a prominent  angle,  and  shortly  contracted  at  the  base;  in  another  of 
F.  v.  Mueller’s,  they  are  straight,  quite  terete,  oblong,  rounded  at  both  ends,  but  terminating 
abruptly  in  a narrow  straight  beak  of  about  2 lines. — Benth. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  close  in  grain,  tough,  hard,  and  prettily  marked. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql 
I Foods  No.  163b. 

Ripe  fruit  eaten. — Palmer  l.c. 

12.  T.  sericocarpa  (fruit  silky),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  ix.  159.  A tall  tree  with 
light-coloured  bark  ; branchlets  very  thinly  silky.  Leaves  obovate,  cuneate  at 
the  base  and  decurrent  upon  the  short  petiole,  2 to  4in.  long,  1 to  2in.  broad, 
glabrous  and  shining  on  both  sides.  Spikes  2 to  8,  interrupted.  Flowers  small, 
silky ; buds  acute,  apiculate.  Calyx-lobes  about  1 line  long,  flavescent  inside, 
densely  bearded  at  the  base.  Stamens  yellowish,  scarcely  longer  than  the  calyx- 
lobes.  Style  about  1 line  long.  Drupe  small,  ovate,  about  Ain.  long,  apiculate, 
slightly  compressed,  silky,  the  margins  angular  but  not  winged.  Putamen 
tuberculose  -rugose . 

Hab.:  Many  localities  in  tropical  Queensland. 

Wood  of  a light-yellow,  with  a darker-coloured  heartwood  ; hard  and  tough  ; would  suit  well 
for  chair-making. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  163. 

13.  T.  microcarpa  (fruit  small),  Dene.  Herb.  Tim.  Descr.  129 ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  502.  Young  shoots  minutely  pubescent.  Leaves  broadly 
ovate-elliptical,  rarely  slightly  obovate,  shortly  and  obtusely  acuminate,  3 to  5in. 
long,  uarrowed  into  a petiole  of  about  lin.,  glabrous  or  slightly  hoary  underneath 
with  a minute  pubescence,  thinly  coriaceous,  with  distant  primary  veins  and 
copious  reticulations,  the  pellucid  dots  although  small,  yet  more  conspicuous  than 
in  most  species.  Spikes  attaining  the  length  of  the  leaves.  Flowers  numerous 
but  not  densely  crowded.  Calyx  rusty  outside  with  a minute  tomentum,  densely 
villous  inside  but  not  seen  fully  expanded.  Drupe,  according  to  Decaisne,  olive- 
shaped, acuminate,  glabrous. 

Hab.:  Gulf  country. 

Also  in  Timor.  I have  not  seen  the  Australian  specimens  mentioned  by  Decaisne  as  having 
been  gathered  on  the  S.  coast,  probably  from  one  of  those  mistakes  in  the  labels  which  occur 
in  so  many  instances  in  the  Australian  collections  in  the  Paris  Herbarium,  owing  in  a great 
measure  to  the  illegible  handwriting  and  absurd  orthography  of  the  original  labels  of  the 
gardener  who  accompanied  Baudin’s  Expedition.  The  above  description  is  taken  from  a Timor 
specimen  communicated  by  Decaisne  The  species  may  poss  bly  prove  to  be  a variety  of  T. 
Belerica,  Roxb.,  which  extends  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago.  The  leaves  are  ovate,  as 
stated  in  Decaisne’s  description,  rather  than  obovate,  as  they  are  said  to  be  by  some  mistake  in 
the  diagnosis. — Benth. 


14.  T.  grandiflora  (flowers  large),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  503.  A small  tree  ; 
branches  and  foliage  silky  or  the  leaves  at  length  glabrous.  Leaves  linear-oblong 
or  cuneate,  obtuse  or  retuse,  1A  to  3in.  long,  coriaceous,  very  obliquely  veined  and 
reticulate,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole.  Spikes  usually  exceeding  the  leaves, 
with  flowers  much  larger  than  in  any  other  Tenninalia.  Buds  acuminate. 
Calyx-tube  or  ovary  above  2 lines  long,  and  the  limb  of  the  calyx  as 
much  in  diameter,  the  lobes  acuminate.  Stamens  5 to  G lines  long.  Style  Ain. 
long.  Drupe  nearly  globular,  about  lin.  long,  tapering  into  a conical  beak  of 
about  Jin.,  smooth  and  glabrous,  without  wings  or  angles. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria  and  Arnhem  S.  Bay,  R.  Broicn. 

There  are  two  forms,  one  with  long  narrow  leaves,  quite  glabrous  except  when  very  young,  the 
spikes  glabrous  or  slightly  silky,  and  the  stamens  fully  ^in.  long ; the  other  much  more  silky, 
the  leaves  broader,  shorter  and  more  cuneate,  and  the  silky  flowers  rather,  but  not  much, 
smaller. — Benth. 


L.  COMBRETACEjE. 


569 


2.  LUMNITZERA,  Willd. 

(After  Stephen  Lumnitzer.) 

Calyx-tube  produced  above  the  ovai’y  but  scarcely  contracted,  the  limb  cam- 
panulate,  shortly  5-lobed  or  5-toothed.  Petals  5,  spreading.  Stamens  10  or 
fewer.  Ovules  2 to  5 ; style  filiform,  with  a minute  stigma.  Fruit  ovoid-oblong, 
crowned  by  the  persistent  calyx,  narrowed  and  flattened  at  the  base,  hard  and 
almost  woody.  Seed  linear,  with  convolute  cotyledons. — -Maritime  trees  or 
shrubs.  Leaves  crowded  at  the  ends  of  the  branches,  obovate  or  cuneate,  thick, 
entire  or  slightly  crenate.  Flowers  in  short  racemes.  Bracteoles  2,  adnate  to 
the  base  of  the  calyx-tube,  persistent  but  not  enlarged  after  flowering. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a few  species.  The  two  following  are  widely  dispersed  along  the 
seacoasts  of  tropical  Asia,  extending  from  E.  Africa  to  the  Pacific  Islands. — Benth. 

Flowers  scarlet,  in  terminal  racemes.  Calyx  fully  Jin.  long.  Stamens  twice  as 

long  as  the  petals 1.  L.  coccinea. 

Flowers  white,  in  axillary  racemes.  Calyx  about  4 lines  long.  Stamens 

scarcely  exceeding  the  petals 2.  L.  racemosa. 

1.  L.  COCCinea  (scarlet  flowers),  W.  and  Am.  Prod.  816;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
ii.  508.  A glabrous  bushy  shrub  or  small  tree.  Leaves  obovate  or  oblong- 
cuneate,  very  obtuse,  often  2in.  long,  thick  and  fleshy.  Flowers  scarlet,  in  dense 
terminal  racemes,  of  which  occasionally  2 or  3 form  a small  corymb.  Calyx  in 
the  Australian  specimens  fully  Jin.  long  at  the  time  of  flowering,  continuous  with 
and  narrowed  into  a somewhat  flattened  pedicel  of  2 or  3 lines  ; lobes  of  the  limb 
short,  broad  and  obtuse.  Petals  exceeding  the  calyx-lobes  by  about  2 lines  ; 
stamens  twice  as  long.  Fruiting-calyx  above  lin.  long. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander  ; edges  of  mangrove  swamps,  from  Rockingham 
Bay  to  Cape  York. 

We  have  precisely  the  same  form  from  the  Fiji  Islands;  the  common  Malayan  specimens 
have  usually  rather  smaller  specimens. — Bentli. 

2.  I.,  racemosa  (flowers  in  racemes),  Willd.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  22  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  ii.  504.  A glabrous  tree  or  tall  shrub,  with  the  foliage  of  L.  coccinea,  but 
the  racemes  are  all  axillary,  usually  about  as  long  as  the  leaves,  and  the  flowers 
are  smaller  and  white.  Calyx  at  the  time  of  flowering  about  4 lines  long,  and 
not  above  Jin.  when  in  fruit,  the  lobes  or  teeth  very  short.  Petals  about  1J  line 
long,  and  the  stamens  very  little  longer. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown,  Henne ; Cairncross  Island,  Torres 
Straits,  M-Gillivray,  Henne;  Fitzroy  River  and  near  Keppel  Bay,  Thozet. 

This  appears  to  be  the  commonest  of  the  two  species  on  the  coasts  of  tropical  Asia. — Benth. 

Wood  of  a pinkish-grey  colour,  hard,  and  close  in  the  grain. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  164. 


3.  MACROPTERANTHES,  F.  v.  Muell. 

(Referring  to  the  prominent  wings  of  the  calyx.) 

Calyx-tube  produced  above  the  ovary  and  scarcely  contracted,  the  limb  rather 
broader,  shortly  5-lobed  or  5-toothed.  Petals  5.  Stamens  10  or  fewer.  Ovules 
10  to  12,  pendulous ; style  filiform,  with  a minute  stigma.  Fruit  (oblong  ?) 
small  trees.  Leaves  opposite  or  clustered  at  the  nodes,  small  obovate  or 
crowned  by  the  persistent  calyx.  — Silky- white  or  tomentose  shrubs  or 
oblong,  entire.  Flowers  in  pairs  on  axillary  (or  terminal  ?)  peduncles.  Bracteoles 
adnate  in  the  centre  to  the  base  of  tbe  calyx ; the  margins  free,  much  enlarged 
after  flowering,  forming  wings  to  the  fruiting  calyx. 

The  genus  is  endemic  in  Australia.  It  is  very  closely  allied  to  Lumnitzera,  differing  in  the 
wings  of  the  fruiting-calyx  and  in  the  number  of  ovules,  and  the  species  are  not  strictly 
maritime. — Benth, 


570  L.  COMBRETACEiE . [Macropteranthes. 

Leaves  almost  sessile,  clustered  at  the  nodes,  oblong,  silvery-white. 

Bracteoles  or  calyx-wings  much  shorter  than  the  fruiting-calyx  ....  1.  M.  Montana. 

Leaves  distinctly  petiolate,  opposite,  obovate,  tomentose 2.  M Leichhardtii. 

Leaves  opposite,  obovate-orbiculate,  nearly  glabrous 3.  M.  Fitzalani. 

1.  IVI.  montana  (mountain  plant),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  91  ; Bentli.  FI. 


Au&tr.  ii.  504.  A small  tree,  with  rigid  divaricate  branclilets,  occasionally 
spinescent.  Leaves  clustered  at  the  nodes,  narrow-oblong,  obtuse,  narrowed  into 
a very  short  petiole,  silvery-tomentose  on  both  sides.  Flowers  only  seen  loose 
and  not  perfect.  Calyx  after  flowering  attaining  nearly  lin.  but  not  yet  ripe, 
densely  silky-pubescent  outside,  with,  short  lobes.  Petals  apparently  oblong  or 
obovate,  about  Jin.  long.  Stamens  longer.  Bracteoles  about  two-thirds  as  long 
as  the  calyx,  nearly  orbicular,  the  broad  almost  scarious  free  margins  folded  back. 
— Lumnitzera  montana,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  149. 

Hab.:  Arid  hills,  Newcastle  Range,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

2.  IVI.  Leichhardtii  (after  L.  Leichhardt),  F . v , M.  Fragm.  iii.  91  ; Bentli. 
FI.  Austr.  ii.  505.  Apparently  more  branched  and  not  so  rigid  as  the  other  two 
species.  Leaves  less  crowded,  all  opposite,  obovate,  very  obtuse,  mostly  J to  fin. 
long,  narrowed  into  a petiole  of  1 to  2 lines,  softly  silky-tomentose  on  both  sides, 
but  not  so  white  as  in  the  other  species,  and  becoming  nearly  glabrous  above 
with  age.  Peduncles  shorter  than  the  leaves,  bearing  at  the  end  2 pedicellate 
flowers,  of  which  I have  only  seen  the  calyx,  enlarged  after  flowering  to  from  4 
to  6 lines,  with  the  adnate  bracteoles  nearly  as  long. 

Hab.:  Ruined  Castle  Creek,  Leichhardtii. 

3.  IVI.  Fitzalani  (after  E.  Fitzalan),  F . v.  M.  Fragm.  viii.  160.  A tree  of 

moderate  size  ; the  tips  of  the  branchlets  silky.  Leaves  opposite  chartaceous, 
i to  ljin.  long,  obcordate  or  obovate-orbicular  on  petioles  from  1J  to  3 lines  long, 
upper  side  glabrous,  the  under  side  sparsely  pilose.  Peduncles  2 or  solitary,  J to 
lin.  long,  puberulous  bearing  1 or  2 flowers.  Bracts  opposite  at  top  of  peduncle, 
cordate-orbicular,  about  1 line  long,  deciduous.  Pedicels  very  slender,  almost 
glabrous  about  the  length  of  the  calyx.  Calyx  4 to  6 lines  long,  tube  almost 
infundibaliform,  teeth  5 to  7,  throat  bearded.  Bracteoles  or  calyx-wings 

orbicular,  almost  glabrous,  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Petals  almost  sessile,  ovate- 
orbicular  pubescent  on  both  sides.  Stamens  10  to  13;  filaments  glabrous, 
setaceous,  the  longest  about  3 lines,  inflexed.  Anthers  dorsifixed,  rotund, 

introrse,  the  cells  longitudinally  2-valved.  Style  glabrous,  3 lines  long  setaceous. 
Stigma  very  minute. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Port  Denison,  Gladstone,  and  Bowen. 

Wood  near  the  bark  yellow,  the  centre  dark-grey ; close-grained  and  hard  ; useful  in  turnery 
and  cabinet  work. — Bailty’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  164a. 


4.  GYROCARPUS,  Jacq. 

(From  the  wings  of  fruit  causing  it  to  twirl  in  falling  from  the  tree.) 

Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary,  or  none  in  male  flowers  ; limb  4 to  7-cleft. 
Petals  none.  Stamens  4 to  6,  alternating  with  as  many  club-shaped  staminodia, 
or  fewer  or  none  in  the  female  flowers.  Ovary  inferior,  with  1 pendulous  ovule 
and  a sessile  stigma,  abortive  in  the  male  flowers.  Drupe  dry,  crowned  by  2 
much  elongated,  erect,  spathulate,  wing-like  calyx-lobes.  Seed  oblong, 
pendulous,  without  albumen  ; cotyledons  petiolate,  convulate  round  tbe  radicle. — 
Tall  tree.  Leaves  alternate,  broad,  entire  or  lobed.  Flowers  polygamous,  very 
small,  crowded  in  dense  corymbose  cymes. 

The  genus  consists  of  a single  species  common  to  the  tropical  regions  of  Central  America  and 
tropical  Asia.  It  forms  one  of  the  small  group  of  Gyrocarpece , Dumort.,  or  Illigerece,  Blume, 
associated  by  many  botanists  with  Laurinece,  chiefly  on  account  of  the  dehiscence  of  the  anthers, 


Gyr  occur  pus. \ 


L.  COMBRETACECE. 


571 


but  which  Lindley  is  no  doubt  more  correct  in  adding  as  a suborder  to  Combretacece.  The  same 
dehiscence  of  the  anthers  is  exemplified  in  Berberidece  and  Hamamelidece,  without  being  constant 
in  either  Order.  The  fruit  and  seeds  are  quite  those  of  Combretacece,  and  there  is  considerable 
affinity  in  many  other  respects  between  llligera  and  Combretacece  on  the  one  hand  and 
Hamamelidece  on  the  other.— Benth. 

1.  Cr.  Jacquini  (after  N.  J.  Jacquin),  Boxb.  PL  Corom.  i.  2,  t.  1,  copied  into 
Lam.  lllustr.  t.  850;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  ii.  505.  A tall  tree.  Leaves  deciduous, 
crowded  at  the  ends  of  the  thick  branchlets,  broadly  ovate  or  orbicular,  on  young 
trees  often  8 to  lOin.  long  and  broad  and  deeply  3-lobed,  on  older  trees  usually 
smaller  and  entire  or  broadly  and  shortly  lobed,  usually  more  or  less  acuminate, 
truncate  or  cordate  at  the  base,  glabrous  or  tomentose  underneath  or  on  both 
sides,  the  petioles  varying  from  1 to  4in.  Peduncles  in  the  upper  axils  or  close 
above  the  last  leaves,  rarely  exceeding  the  petioles,  bearing  each  a repeatedly 
branched  cyme  with  densely  crowded  exceedingly  small  flowers,  forming  little 
globular  heads  before  expanding,  sometimes  entirely  males,  sometimes  with  a few 
hermaphrodite  or  female  flowers  scattered  in  the  cyme  or  chiefly  in  the  forks. 
Drupes  ovoid,  usually  about  fin.  long,  the  wings  erect,  oblanceolate,  rounded  at 
the  end,  much  narrowed  below  the  middle,  varying  in  the  Australian  specimens 
from  under  2in.  long  and  about  ^in.  broad  to  2|in.  long  and  about  5 lines  broad. 
— Pers.  Syn.  i.  143;  G.  americanus,  Jacq.;  Meissn.  in  DC.  Prod.  xv.  247; 
G.  asiaticus,  Willd.;  Meissn.  l.c.  248  ; G.  acuminatus,  Meissn.  l.c.;  G.  sphenopterus, 
R.  Br.;  Endl.  Iconogr.  t.  43;  Meissn.  l.c.;  G.  rugosus,  R.  Br.;  Meissn.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Gilbert  Eiver,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Port  Denison,  E.  Fitzalan  ? ; Rockhampton  northward. 

Also  in  Columbia  and  Central  America,  in  tropical  Asia,  the  eastern  Archipelago,  and  islands 
of  the  Pacific.  All  the  writers  who,  unwilling  to  believe  that  the  same  species  should  have  so 
wide  a geographical  range,  have  distinguished  several  species  of  Gyrocarpus,  have  expressed 
some  hesitation  in  doing  so,  for  the  characters  assigned  all  break  down  when  applied  to  other 
specimens  than  those  actually  described.  The  differences  in  the  indumentum  and  shape  of  the 
leaf  are  often  much  greater  in  different  specimens  from  the  same  locality  than  between  those 
gathered  at  the  greatest  distances.  None  are  more  striking  than  in  two  specimens  from  the 
Fiji  Islands  which,  according  to  Seemann’s  notes,  represent  the  young  and  the  old  trees.  In  the 
former,  the  leaves  are  large,  broadly  cordate  and  deeply  3-lobed  as  figured  in  Jacq.  Ic.  Amer.  t. 
178,  f.  80,  and  loosely  tomentose  on  both  sides ; in  the  latter  they  are  quite  entire,  glabrous, 
more  acuminate  and  more  acute  at  the  base  than  in  the  form  characterized  as  G.  acuminatus, 
Meissn.  The  fruit-wings  are  usually  longest  in  the  American,  shortest  in  the  Australian  speci- 
mens, but  not  uniformly  so  even  in  the  comparatively  few  specimens  preserved  in  herbaria. 
Glabrous  and  more  or  less  hairy  filaments  occur  in  India  as  well  as  in  Australia.  The  tomentum 
of  the  leaves  is  even  more  inconstant  than  any  other  character.  R.  Brown’s  specimens  have 
been  unfortunately  mislaid,  but  from  Endlicher’s  figure  engraved  from  Bauer’s  drawing,  and 
from  the  variety  of  Australian  specimens  I have  seen,  I have  no  doubt  that  he  was  right  in  the 
suspicion  he  expressed  that  his  species  might  not  be  different  from  the  common  one. — Benth. 

Wood  very  light  and  soft. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  165. 


Order  LI.  MYRTACE JE. 

Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base  or  up  to  the  insertion  of  the 
stamens  ; limb  more  or  less  divided  (usually  to  the  base)  into  4 or  5,  very  rarely 
3 or  more  than  5,  lobes  or  teeth,  or  reduced  to  a narrow  border,  or  entirely 
wanting  ; lobes  usually  imbricate  or  open  in  the  bud.  Petals  usually  as  many  as 
calyx-lobes,  very  much  imbricate  in  the  bud,  the  external  one  sometimes  larger 
than  the  others,  but  usually  all  nearly  equal  when  expanded,  sometimes  all 
concrete  and  falling  off  in  a single  operculum,  or  rarely  entirely  wanting. 
Stamens  indefinite,  usually  numerous  or  rarely  few  and  definite,  inserted  in  one 
or  several  rows  on  a disk,  either  thin  and  lining  the  calyx-tube  above  the  ovary 
and  forming  a thickened  ring  at  its  orifice,  or  thicker  and  forming  a ring  close 
round  the  summit  of  the  ovary  ; filaments  free  or  rarely  united  into  a riug  or 
tube  at  the  base,  or  into  as  many  bundles  as  there  are  calyx-lobes ; anthers 


572 


Li.  MYRTACEJE. 


2-celled,  versatile  or  attached  by  the  base,  the  cells  opening  in  longitudinal  slits, 
or  rarely  in  terminal  pores.  Ovary  inferior  or  rarely  almost  superior,  but 
enclosed  in  the  calyx-tube,  sometimes  1 -celled,  with  a placenta  attached  to  the 
base  or  adnate  to  one  side,  more  frequently  2 or  more  celled,  with  the  placentas 
in  the  inner  angle  of  each  cell,  very  rarely  1 -celled,  with  2 parietal  placentas. 
Style  simple,  with  a small  or  a capitate  or  peltate,  very  rarely  lobed  stigma. 
Ovules  2 or  more  to  each  placenta,  in  2 or  more  rows,  or  very  rarely  solitary, 
erect  pendulous  or  laterally  attached,  anatropous  or  amphitropous.  Fruit  inferior, 
adnate  to  the  calyx-tube,  and  crowned  by  the  persistent  limb,  or  marked  by  its 
scar  when  deciduous,  or  very  rarely  half  or  almost  wholly  superior,  and  sur- 
rounded at  the  base  by  the  persistent  calyx-tube,  either  capsular  and  opening 
loculicidally  at  the  summit,  in  as  many  valves  as  cells,  or  indehiscent,  dry,  and 
1-seeded,  or  succulent  and  indhiscent.  Perfect  seeds  usually  very  few  or  solitary 
in  each  cell,  even  when  the  ovules  are  numerous,  or  rarely  numerous  and  perfect ; 
teeth  either  thin  and  membranous,  or  crustaceous,  fleshy  or  bony.  Albumen  none 
or  very  scanty  near  the  hilum.  Embryo  straight  or  variously  curved,  fleshy,  with 
minute  cotyledons  at  one  end,  or  with  large,  flat,  or  variously  folded  cotyledons, 
or  with  thick  fleshy  distinct  or  consolidated  cotyledons,  and  an  exceedingly  short 
radicle,  or  rarely  apparently  homogeneous,  the  cotyledons  inconspicuous  before 
germination.  Abortive  ovules  in  many  capsular  genera,  enlarged  without  being 
fertilized,  and  simulating  the  seeds,  but  of  a hard,  nearly  homogeneous,  woody, 
or  granular  consistence.— Trees  or  shrubs,  very  rarely  undershrubs.  Leaves 
simple,  entire  or  rarely  obscurely  crenate-toothed,  opposite  or  less  frequently 
alternate,  more  or  less  dotted  in  all  but  the  Lccythulece,  with  small  resinous 
glands,  either  pellucid  or  black  and  superficial,  often  scarcely  visible  when  the 
leaf  is  thick.  Stipules  none,  or  rarely  very  minute  and  fugacious.  Flowers 
solitary  or  in  racemes  panicles  or  cymes,  axillary  or  apparently  terminal  from  the 
terminal  bud  not  growing  out  till  after  the  flowering  is  over.  Bracts  solitary  at 
the  base  of  the  peduncles,  or  forming  an  imbricate  involucre  from  the  abortion  of 
the  lower  flowers.  Bracteoles  2 at  the  base  of  or  on  the  pedicel,  sometimes  very 
small  or  abortive,  and  often  exceedingly  deciduous. 

The  fleshy-fruited  genera  of  the  Order  are  widely  spread  over  the  tropical  regions  both  of  the 
New  and  the  Old  World,  including  many  of  the  largest  forest  trees,  and  are,  in  Australia, 
almost  limited  to  the  tropics,  a very  few  species  extending  into  N.  S.  Wales,  and  only  one  into 
Victoria.  The  capsular  genera  are  either  entirely  or  chiefly  Australian  ; four  of  the  larger 
ones,  represented  by  a few  species  in  New  Caledonia  and  the  Indian  Archipelago,  one, 
Xanthostemon,  represented  by  more  species  in  New  Caledonia  than  in  Australia,  two  small 
ones  are  in  New  Caledonia,  and  not  yet  found  in  Australia,  one,  Eucalyptus,  is  represented  in 
New  Guinea,  Timor,  if  not  in  the  Moluccas,  but  is  not  in  New  Caledonia,  another,  Metrosi- 
deros,  is  more  abundant  in  the  Pacific  Islands  than  in  Australia,  and  extends  also  to  the 
Malayan  peninsula,  and  in  anomalous  forms  (perhaps  not  strictly  congeners)  to  S.  Africa  and 
S.  America.  Two  of  the  widest-spread  genera,  Leptospermum  and  Metrosideros,  are  also  in  New 
Zealand. — Benth. 

Tribe  I.  Cham®laucie®. — Ovary  1 -celled,  with  a single  placenta.  Fruit 

indehiscent,  dry,  with  1 or  rarely  2 seeds.  Shrubs  often  heath-like.  Leaves 
small.  Flowers  solitary,  or  very  rarely  2 together  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves  or 
bracts,  scattered  along  the  branches,  or  forming  a terminal  head. 

Subtribe  I.  Euchamaelauciea5. — Stamens  twice  as  many  as  petals,  with  intervening 
staminodia  rarely  wanting,  or  4 times  as  many  as  petals,  without  staminodia,  the  filaments  more 
or  less  distinctly  united  in  a ring  at  the  base.  Ovules  2 to  10,  attached  to  an  excentrical  basal 
placenta,  or  in  2 roics,  on  a short  lateral  placenta.  Embryo,  where  known,  consisting  of  a thick 
radicle,  the  shape  of  the  seed  with  a slender  neck  lying  on  the  summit,  apparently  entire  or  with  2 
minute  cotyledons  at  the  end. 

Stamens  10,  alternating  with  as  many  staminodia  (very  minute  or  wanting 
in  one  species  of  Darwinia  and  one  of  Verticordia). 

Calyx-lobes  5,  subulate,  entire 2.  Homoranthus. 

Calyx-lobes  5,  broad,  entire  or  shortly  ciliolate.  Anthers  globose  or 

didymous,  opening  in  terminal  pores  or  short  slits.  Style  usually  long  . 1.  Darwinia. 

Calyx-lobes  5 or  10,  deeply  divided  into  subulate,  plumose,  or  hair-like  lobes  3.  Verticordia. 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


573 


Subtribe  II.  Caly thrice®. — Stamejis  indefinite,  few  or  numerous,  free,  in  several  rows,  the 
inner  ones  shorter,  without  staminodia.  Ovules  2,  collaterally  attached  to  a filiform  placenta, 
extending  from  the  base  to  the  summit  of  the  cavity . Embryo  straight,  very  shortly  divided  into 
2 small  cotyledons  at  the  summit. 

Calyx-lobes  persistent,  or  rarely  falling  off  with  the  upper  portion  of  the 
tube,  terminating  in  a long  bristle  or  rarely  in  a short  point.  Ovules  2, 
on  a filiform  placenta  attached  both  to  the  base  and  summit  of  the 
ovary 4.  Calythrix. 

Subtribe  III.  Thryptomenese.—  Stamens  5,  10,  or  indefinite,  free,  in  one  or  several  rows, 
without  staminodia.  Ovules  2,  rarely  4 to  10,  attached  in  2 rows  to  a placenta,  either  basal  or 
adnate  to  the  side  of  the  cavity  or  extending  to  the  summit  of  the  cavity.  Embryo,  where  known, 
very  thick,  with  a slender  neck  inflected  and  divided  at  the  end  into  2 small  cotyledons. 

(The  three  genera  here  included  have  the  habit  and  embryo  of  Bceckea,  with  the  1 -celled  ovary 
of  Euchamalauciece. — Benth.) 

Calyx-lobes  short,  deciduous.  Ovules  2,  the  placenta  basal  or  adnate  to 


one  side  of  the  ovary 5.  Homalocat.yx. 

Stamens  5 or  10,  regularly  alternate  with  or  opposite  to  the  calyx-lobes, 
quite  distinct  and  without  staminodia. 

Ovules  2 or  more,  ascending  or  attached  to  a lateral  placenta.  Stamens, 

when  5,  alternate  with  the  petals 6.  Thryptomene. 

Ovules  2 or  4,  pendulous  from  the  summit  of  a filiform  placenta.  Stamens, 
when  5,  opposite  to  the  petals 7.'  Micromyrtus. 


Tribe  II.  Leptosperme*.— Ovary  divided  into  2 to  5,  or  rarely  more  cells. 
Capsule  opening  at  the  summit  loculicidally  in  as  many  valves  as  there  are  cells, 
or  very  rarely  indehiscent,  with  1 or  2 seeds. 

Subtribe  I.  BseckeaBae. — Leaves  opposite,  usually  small.  Flowers  usually  small,  pedicel- 
late or  subsessile,  solitary  or  few  in  a small  cyme,  umbel,  or  head  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves,  some- 
times forming  a terminal  head  with  the  floral  leaves  reduced  to  bracts.  Stamens  definite,  or,  if 
indefinite,  usually  in  a single  row,  free  or  united  at  the  base  in  a ring,  or  into  clusters  alternating 
with  the  petals  (not  opposite  the  petals  as  in  other  subtribes),  and  usually  shorter  than  the  petals. 
Ovules  usually  in  2 rows.  Embryo  with  a thick  radicle,  produced  at  the  opposite  end  into  a slender 
incurved  neck,  or  into  a short  point  with  very  small  often  minute  cotyledons. 

(The  most  constant  character  of  this  subtribe  is  probably  that  derived  from  the  embryo,  in 
which,  so  far  as  known,  the  cotyledons  are  always  minute,  whilst  in  the  following  subtribes  they 
are  as  long  as  or  longer  than  the  radicle. — Benth.) 

Stamens  in  a single  row,  definite  or  indefinite,  shorter  than  or  rarely  shortly 
exceeding  the  petals,  free  or  united  in  bundles,  alternating  with  the 
petals.  Leaves  small  or  narrow,  opposite.  Ovules  several  in  each  cell,  in 
2 rows  or  in  a ring  round  a peltate  placenta,  or,  if  2,  collateral.  Flowers 
small,  axillary,  solitary,  or  rarely  few,  on  a common  peduncle.  Stamens 
free,  rarely  exceeding  20,  and  usually  much  fewer 8.  Bjeckia. 

Subtribe  II.  Euleptospermeae. — Leaves  scattered  or  rarely  opposite,  small  or  narrow 
and  coriaceous,  1 or  more-nerved,  rarely  penniveined.  Flowers  solitary  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves 
or  bracts,  closely  sessile  except  in  a very  few  species.  Stamens  indefinite,  in  1 or  more  rows,  free 
or  united  in  bundles  opposite  the  petals,  or  very  rarely  definite.  Anthers  versatile,  with  distinct 
parallel  cells.  Ovules  in  2 or  more  rows  in  each  cell  of  the  ovary.  Embryo  straight  or  slightly 
incurved,  the  cotyledons  usually  longer  than  the  radicle. 

Stamens  in  a single  row,  definite  or  indefinite,  shorter  than  or  rarely  shortly 
exceeding  the  petals,  free  or  united  in  bundles,  alternating  with  the 
petals.  Leaves  small  or  narrow,  alternate. 

Stamens  free,  definite,  or,  if  indefinite,  none  opposite  the  centre  of  the 

petals.  Flowers  in  globular  sessile  heads 9.  Agonis. 

Stamens  numerous,  in  a continuous  series.  Flowers  solitary  or  crowded, 

but  not  in  heads 10.  Leptospermum. 

Stamens  exceeding  the  petals,  indefinite,  either  free  or  united  in  bundles, 
opposite  the  petals.  Leaves  small  or  narrow,  or  rarely  large  and  many- 
nerved.  Flowers  closely  sessile  (except  in  some  species  of  Kunzea ). 

Anthers  versatile,  with  parallel  cells,  opening  longitudinally. 

Stamens  free  (almost  in  5 bundles  in  1 species  of  Callistemon). 

Calyx-lobes  usually  persistent.  Ovary  2 to  5-celled.  Seeds  pendulous. 

Flowers  in  heads  or  solitary,  or  rarely  in  short  spikes 11.  Kunzea. 

Calyx-lobes  usually  deciduous.  Ovary  3 or  4-eelled.  Seeds  ascending. 

Flowers  in  spikes,  terminal  or  crowned  by  the  year’s  shoot  ....  12.  Cat.ustemox. 


574 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


Stamens  united  in  5 bundles  opposite  the  petals  (almost  free  in  one  species 
of  Melaleuca ).  Staminal  bundles  distinct  or  scarcely  united  at  the  base. 

Ovules  several  in  each  cell 13.  Melaleuca. 

Subtribe  III.  Eucalypteae. — Leaves  opposite  or  alternate,  coriaceous,  usually  large. 
Flowers  usually  3 or  more  in  umbels,  sometimes  reduced  to  heads,  or  very  rarely  in  cymes  or 
solitary  ; the  common  peduncle  axillary  or  in  a terminal  corymb  or  panicle.  Calyx  truncate, 
entire  or  remotely  toothed.  Petals  attached  by  a broad  base,  distinct  or  consolidated  into  an 
operculum.  Stamens  indefinite,  in  several  series,  free  or  obscurely  united  into  4 bundles  ; anthers 
various.  Ovules  indefinite  in  each  cell.  Embryo  with  the  cotyledons  longer  than  the  radicle  and 
often  folded  over  it. 

Stamens  numerous,  free  or  obscurely  united  at  the  base.  Petals  attached  by 
a broad  base,  free  or  consolidated  into  an  operculum.  Leaves  usually 
large.  Flowers  in  umbels,  heads,  or  cymes,  rarely  sessile  on  the  stem. 

Calyx-teeth  distinct,  distant.  Petals  free 14.  Anoophoka. 

Calyx  truncate,  entire  or  with  4 minute  teeth.  Petals  united  in  an  oper- 
culum   15.  Eucalyptus. 

Subtribe  IV.  IVIetrosidei’ese.  -J. eaves  opposite  or  rarely  alternate,  Myrtle-like  or  large, 
penniveined.  Flowers  usually  in  little  cymes,  corymbs,  or  short  racemes,  axillary  or  in  terminal 
panicles,  rarely  solitary  in  the  axils  and  then  pedicellate.  Stamens  numerous,  free  or  rarely 
united  in  bundles  opposite  the  petals ; anthers  versatile,  the  cells  parallel,  opening  longitudinally. 
Ovules  few  or  many  in  each  cell  of  the  ovary,  in  2 or  more  rows.  Embryo  straight  or  slightly 
curved,  the  cotyledons  longer  than  the  radicle. 

(This  subtribe  has  nearly  the  flowers  and  embryo  of  Euleptospermew,  but  a different  in- 
florescence, and  a habit  approaching  that  of  Myrtece.—Benth.) 

Stamens  exceeding  the  petals,  indefinite,  free,  or  rarely  united  in  bundles 
opposite  the  petals.  Leaves  large  or  myrtle-like,  penniveined.  Flowers 
in  pedunculate  heads,  cymes  or  corymbs,  or  rarely  solitary  and  pedi- 
cellate. 

(Stamens  scarcely  exceeding  the  petals  in  some  species  of  Tristania.) 

Stamens  united  in  5 bundles.  Leaves  alternate  or  in  one  species  opposite  16.  Tristania. 


Outer  stamens  with  reniform  sterile  anthers.  Leaves  opposite,  narrow  . 18.  Lysicarpus. 
Flowers  in  globular  pedunculate  heads.  Leaves  opposite.  Stamens  of 

Metrosideros 17.  Syncarpia. 

Flowers  in  cymes.  Stamens  free,  all  perfect. 

Ovules  numerous,  horizontal  or  ascending,  covering  the  placenta. 

Leaves  opposite 19.  Metrosideros. 

Ovules  in  a ring  round  a club-shaped  or  peltate  placenta.  Leaves 

alternate 20.  Xanthostemon. 

Ovules  pendulous  or  recurved.  Calyx-lobes  almost  petal-like.  Leaves 

opposite 21.  Backhousia. 

Stamens  indefinite,  free.  Fruit  dry,  indehiscent.  Ovary  perfectly  or  imper- 
fectly 2-celled  or  1-celled  by  abortion. 

Calyx-lobes  almost  petal-like.  Petals  4,  shorter  than  or  scarcely  exceeding 

the  calyx-lobes.  Flowers  in  cymes,  heads  or  umbels 21.  Backhousia. 

Calyx-lobes  8.  Petals  none.  Flowers  solitary,  sessile 22.  Osbornia. 

Calyx-lobes  5,  narrow.  Petals  5.  Flowers  solitary,  pedicellate  ....  27.  Fenzlia. 


Tribe  III.  Myrte.£. — Ovary  divided  into  2 or  more  cells,  or  very  rarely 
1-celled,  with  2 parietal  placentas.  Fruit  an  indehiscent  berry  or  drupe. 


Limb  of  calyx  closed  in  bud,  with  the  lobes  subimbricate,  rather  deeply 

valvately  divided  when  in  flower 23.  ‘Psidium. 

Ovary  1-celled,  with  2 parietal  placentas.  Leaves  3-nerved 26.  Rhodamnia. 

Ovary  2-celled  (or  1-celled  by  abortion),  with  2 or  3 superposed  ovules  in 

each  cell.  Leaves  white  underneath 27.  Fenzlia. 

Ovary  with  2,  4,  or  6 rows  of  superposed  ovules,  separated  by  vertical  septa, 
the  ovules  themselves  separated  by  transverse  septa  (1,  2,  or  3-celled,  with 
double  rows  of  ovules  in  each  cell,  all  separated  by  spurious  septa). 

Leaves  sometimes  3-nerved 24.  Rhodomyrtus. 

Ovary  2 or  3-celled,  with  several  ovules  in  each  cell,  without  spurious 
dissepiments. 

Embryo  long  and  narrow,  curved,  circular,  or  spiral,  with  small  cotyledons. 

Flowers  5-merous  or  rarely  4-merous,  solitary  or  racemose 25.  Myrtus. 

Embryo  thick  and  fleshy,  either  indivisible  or  with  2 thick  fleshy 
cotyledons  and  a short  radicle.  Flowers  4-merous  or  rarely  5-merous, 

solitary  or  in  trichotomous  cymes  or  panicles 29.  Eugenia. 

Ovary  5 or  rarely  4-celled,  with  2 to  6 ovules  in  each  cell.  Embryo  of  Myrtus  28.  Decabpermum. 
(One  species  of  Kunzea  has  the  fruit  succulent  and  pulpy.) 


LI.  MYRTACEjE. 


575 


Tklbe  IY.  Lecythideje. 

Subtribe  I.  Barring'toniese. — Ovary  divided  more  or  less  completely  into  2 or  more  cells. 
Fruit  indehiscent,  hard  and  fibrous  or  fleshy.  Leaves  alternate  or  croicded  at  the  ends  of  the 


branches,  large,  not  dotted.  Calyx  often  nearly  valvate. 

Stamens  all  perfect.  Fruit  angular,  fibrous,  with  a single  seed 30.  Barringtonia. 

Outer  or  inner  stamens  or  both  without  anthers.  Fruit  ovoid  or  globular, 

not  angular,  fleshy,  with  several  seeds  enveloped  in  pulp 31.  Cakeya. 


1.  DARWINIA,  Rudge. 

(After  Dr.  Darwin.) 

(Genetyllis,  DC.;  Hedaroma,  Lindl.;  Polyzone,  Endl.;  Schuermannia,  F.  v.  M.; 

Cryptostemon,  F.  v.  M.;  Franciscia,  Endl.) 

Calyx-tube  nearly  cylindrical,  turbinate  or  hemispherical,  the  lower  adnate 
part  more  or  less  distinctly  5 or  rarely  10-ribbed,  the  upper  disk-bearing  free 
portion  scarcely  ribbed ; lobes  5,  scarious  or  petal-like,  often  very  minute. 
Petals  5,  entire.  Stamens  10,  alternating  with  as  many  staminodia,  very 
shortly  united  at  the  base  in  a single  ring,  or  rarely  the  staminodia  when  broad 
forming  an  outer  row  ; anthers  globular,  opening  in  2 minute  pores  near  the 
scarcely  prominent  connective.  Ovary  1 -celled,  with  2,  3,  and  very  rarely 
(except  in  D.  micropetala,  a South  Australian  species)  4 ovules,  inserted 
on  a very  short  basal,  usually  excentric  placenta.  Style  exserted,  usually 
long,  and  more  or  less  bearded  towards  the  end ; stigma  terminal,  minute 
or  capitate.  Fruit  formed  of  the  slightly-enlarged  and  somewhat  hardened 
calyx.  Seed  usually  solitary,  filling  the  fruit,  testa  very  thin.  Embryo  con- 
sisting of  a homogeneous  mass  or  thick  radicle  of  the  shape  of  the  seed, 
with  a rather  slender  neck  lying  along  the  flattened  apex,  entire,  or  perhaps 
divided  at  the  point  into  two  minute  cotyledons. — Shrubs  with  usually  a heath- 
like or  Diosma- like  habit.  Leaves  small,  opposite  or  scattered,  entire.  Flowers 
small,  nearly  sessile,  or  shortly  pedicellate  in  the  upper  axils,  or  in  terminal 
heads,  the  floral  leaves  or  bracts  either  large  and  coloured,  or  small  like  the 
stem-leaves.  Bracteoles  thin  and  scarious,  concave,  and  keeled,  enclosing  the 
young  bud,  and  very  deciduous,  or  small,  narrow,  and  more  persistent. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia. 

Section  I.  Genetyllis. — Calyx-lobes  not  exceeding  half  the  length  of  the  petals,  and  often 
very  minute.  Flowers  in  single  terminal  heads,  rarely  becoming  lateral  by  the  elongation  of  the 
central  axis. — Benth. 

Leaves  crowded,  not  opposite,  semiterete  or  triquetrous.  Flowers  sessile  or 

nearly  so,  in  terminal  heads.  Calyx  5-ribbed,  otherwise  smooth  ....  1.  D.  fascicularis. 

Section  II.  Schuermannia,  F.  v.  M. — Calyx-lobes  as  long  as  the  petals,  or  longer. 
Flowers  in  the  axils  of  the  upper  leaves,  few  or  forming  compound  heads  or  corymbs,  or  rarely 
simple. 

Flowers  few  in  the  upper  axils.  Calyx  glabrous.  Leaves  opposite,  obovate. 

Flowers  pedicellate.  Petals  half  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes.  Ovules  6 . . 2.  D.  Thomasii. 

1.  D.  fascicularis  (flowers  in  fascicles),  Rudge  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  xi.  299, 
t.  22  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  13.  An  erect  much-branched  heath-like  shrub. 
Leaves  scattered,  often  crowded,  linear,  slender,  semiterete  or  obtusely  triquetrous, 
subulate-pointed,  mostly  4 to  5 lines  long,  shortly  petiolate,  the  floral  ones  not 
different  or  slightly  longer.  Flowers  about  6 to  12  together  in  terminal  heads 
within  the  last  leaves.  Bracteoles  narrow  and  short.  Calyx  slender,  not  3 lines 
long,  the  adnate  part  prominently  5-ribbed,  otherwise  smooth  ; lobes  very  small 
and  scale-like.  Petals  broad,  about  ^ line  long.  Staminodia  short  and  filiform. 
Style  long  and  slender. — Schau.  Myrt.  Xeroc.  36,  t.  2 D. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 


576 


LI.  MYRTACE^. 


[Darwinta. 


2.  D.  Thomasii  (after  Dr.  D.  J.  Thomas),  Benth.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  ix. 
181  and  FI.  Austr.  iii.  15.  Slender  and  somewhat  glaucous.  Leaves  opposite, 
obovate-falcate,  very  oblique,  the  midrib  near  the  shorter  edge,  and  terminating 
in  a short  recurved  point  or  acute  angle,  the  floral  ones  not  different.  Flowers 
large,  pink,  on  pedicels  of  3 lines  or  more  in  the  upper  axils.  Bracteoles  persis- 
tent, almost  petal-like,  obtuse,  with  a sharp  point  about  3 lines  long.  Calyx-tube 
rather  narrow,  about  as  long  as  the  bracteoles  ; lobes  petal-like,  obovate-oblong, 
about  2 lines  long,  minutely  denticulate.  Petals  orbicular,  entire,  about  half  as 
long  as  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  shorter  than  the  petals  ; anthers  globular,  the 
cells  opening  in  long  pores  ; staminodia  rather  shorter,  adnate  at  the  base  to  the 
filaments  of  the  petaline  stamens.  Style  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx,  shortly 
bearded  below  the  stigma.  Ovules  6. — Chamalaucium  Thomasii,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm. 
iv.  137,  t.  30. 

Hab.:  Sandstone  country,  head  of  Cape  River,  Bowman. 


2.  HOMORANTHUS,  A.  Cunn. 

(Flowers  regular.) 

Calyx-tube  narrow,  the  adnate  part  5-ribbed  ; lobes  5,  subulate,  longer  than  the 
petals.  Petals  5,  entire.  Stamens  10,  alternating  with  as  many  staminodia,  and 
united  with  them  very  shortly  at  the  base  in  a single  ring.  Anthers  globular, 
opening  in  2 minute  pores  near  the  scarcely  prominent  connective.  Ovary 
1 -celled,  with  about  4 ovules  inserted  on  a short  basal  placenta.  Style  exserted, 
bearded  towards  the  end  ; stigma  terminal,  minute.  Fruit  . . . — Shrub. 
Leaves  opposite.  Flowers  2 to  4 together  at  the  ends  of  the  branches. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species,  only  differing  from  Darwinia  in  the  subulate  calyx- 
lobes. — Benth. 

1.  H.  virgatus  (twiggy),  A.  Cunn.  in  Schau.  Myrt.  Xeroc.  41,  t.  3 A;  Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  15.  Spreading  or  diffuse.  Leaves  linear,  slender,  triquetrous, 
often  falcate,  obtuse  or  shortly  acute,  J to  fin.  long,  the  floral  ones  not  different. 
Flowers  2 to  4 together  at  the  ends  of  the  branches,  nearly  sessile.  Bracteoles 
broad,  concave,  keeled,  scarious,  enclosing  the  young  bud  but  falling  off  long 
before  the  flower  expands.  Calyx-tube  2|  lines  long,  prominently  5-ribbed,  and 
the  adnate  part  somewhat  rugose  between  the  ribs.  Petals  broad,  about  f line 
long.  Staminodia  filiform.  Ovules  in  all  the  flowers  examined  4,  according 
to  Schauer  4 to  8 (Benth.)  (3  or  4,  F.  v.  M.)  Style  not  very  long.  Stigma 
barbellulate  or  glabrescent. — H.  flavescens,  A.  Cunn.  in  Schau.  l.c.  40,  t.  3 B. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  Fraser,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

I can  discover  no  difference  whatever  between  the  two  supposed  species. — Benth. 


3.  VERTICORDIA,  DC. 

(Derivation  obscure.) 

(Chrysorrhoe,  Lindl.) 

Calyx-tube  hemispherical  turbinate  or  rarely  cylindrical,  the  adnate  part  5 or 
10-ribbed,  or  smooth  ; lobes  5,  spreading,  deeply  divided  into  digitate  pectinate 
or  ciliate  lobes,  or  into  numerous  long,  simple,  hair-like  lobes  or  cilia,  with,  in 
some  species,  accessory  lobes,  alternating  with  and  outside  the  principal  ones, 
scarious,  reflexed  on  the  tube,  with  long  cilia  turned  up  again  from  the  base  of 
the  calyx  ; occasionally  also  5 herbaceous  appendages  reflexed  on  the  tube  under 
the  primary  lobes.  Petals  5,  entire  fringed  or  digitate.  Stamens  10,  alternating 
with  as  many  staminodia,  more  or  less  united  at  the  base  in  a ring  or  broad  tube 
in  a single  row,  or  the  staminodia  when  broad  forming  an  outer  series  ; anthers 
ither  globular  and  2-porose,  as  in  Darwinia,  or  with  2 parallel  cells  opening  in 


Vert  icordia .] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


577 


longitudinal  slits  as  in  Chamcelaucium.  Ovary  1 -celled,  either  with  2 or  4 ovules 
on  a small  excentric  placenta,  or  about  8 or  10  on  a more  or  less  peltate  placenta. 
Style  included  or  shortly  exserted,  rarely  elongated ; stigma  terminal,  small,  or 
capitate  or  peltate.  Fruit  formed  by  the  hardened  base  of  the  slightly  enlarged 
persistent  calyx.  Seed  usually  solitary,  testa  very  thin  ; embryo  consisting  of  a 
homogeneous  mass  of  the  shape  of  the  seed,  with  a slender  neck  lying  along 
the  flattened  apex,  entire  or  perhaps  divided  at  the  point  into  two  minute 
cotyledons. — Shrubs  with  usually  a heath-like  or  Diosma-like  aspect,  glabrous 
except  the  cilia  on  the  edges  of  the  leaves.  Leaves  small,  opposite  or  rarely  (in 
V.  serrata,  a West  Australian  species)  alternate,  entire.  Flowers  usually 
pedicellate  in  the  upper  axils,  forming  often  broad  terminal  leafy  corymbs,  or 
simple  leafy  spikes  or  racemes  below  the  ends  of  the  branches ; the  elegantly 
plumose  radiating  calyx-lobes  often  coloured,  the  floral  leaves  resembling  the 
upper  stem-leaves,  but  in  some  species  all  the  upper  leaves  short,  broad,  and 
concave,  whilst  the  lower  ones  are  slender  and  triquetrous.  Bracteoles  thin  and 
scarious,  folded  over  each  other  or  enclosing  the  flower-bud,  but  very  deciduous, 
or  rarely  connate  at  the  base  and  persistent,  the  keel  often  terminating  in  a point 
at  or  below  the  apex,  very  variable  in  length  even  in  the  same  species. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  is  characterised  by  the  calyx. 

1.  V.  Cunninghamii  (after  Allan  Cunningham),  Schau.  Myrt.  Xeroc.  55  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  29.  A tall  erect  shrub.  Leaves  linear,  triquetrous  or 
concave,  obtuse  or  mucronate,  mostly  |ln.  but  sometimes  fin.  long.  Flowers  on 
pedicels  of  about  f to  -Jin.  in  the  upper  axils,  forming  short  terminal  almost 
corymbose  racemes  arranged  in  a long  leafy  panicle.  Calyx- tube  hemispherical, 
10-ribbed  ; primary  lobes  5,  spreading  to  |in.  diameter,  each  one  deeply  divided 
into  long  digitate  pectinate-ciliate  lobes,  the  lateral  ones  reflexed  on  the  tube,  but 
no  accessory  lobes.  Petals  much  shorter  than  the  calyx-lobes,  ovate,  fringed  with 
irregular  teeth.  Stamens  shortly  united  above  the  calyx ; anther-cells  parallel, 
opening  longitudinally,  adnate  to  a connectivum,  thickened  at  the  end  into  a 
small  fleshy  appendage  ; staminodia  linear,  entire.  Style  shortly  exserted,  with 
a ring  of  hairs  round  the  capitate  stigma.  Ovules  8 or  10. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 


4.  CALYTHRIX,  Labill. 

(Referring  to  hairs  of  calyx.) 

(Calycothrix,  Endl.) 

Calyx-tube  elongated,  usually  slender,  10-ribbed,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the 
base  or  its  whole  length  ; lobes  5,  spreading,  short,  with  scarious  margins,  the 
midrib  produced  into  a long  rigid  or  hair-like  awn,  or  rarely  tapering  into  a 
shorter  point.  Petals  5,  entire,  spreading,  deciduous.  Stamens  indefinite, 
numerous  or  rarely  7 to  12,  in  several  rows,  the  inner  ones  shorter,  deciduous ; 
filaments  filiform,  quite  free ; anthers  small,  versatile ; cells  parallel,  opening  in 
longitudinal  slits,  connective  with  a small  globular  gland-like  appendage,  rarely 
thickened  or  conical  and  larger  than  the  cells.  Ovary  1-celled ; ovules  2, 
collaterally  erect,  on  a filiform  placenta  attached  to  the  base  and  to  the  summit 
of  the  cavity,  and  sometimes  continuous  with  the  style.  Style  filiform,  glabrous, 
with  a small  capitate  stigma.  Fruit  formed  by  the  lower,  usually  fusiform,  part 
of  the  calyx-tube,  and  usually  crowned  by  the  persistent  remainder  of  the  calyx. 
Seed  solitary,  cylindrical ; testa  very  thin  ; embryo  of  the  shape  of  the  seed,  quite 
straight,  very  shortly  2-lobed  at  the  upper  end. — Heath-like  shrubs.  Leaves 
scattered  (not  opposite),  small,  semiterete  or  8 or  4-angled  or  rarely  flat  and  rigid, 
entire,  with  occasionally  minute  hair-like  deciduous  stipules.  Flowers  usually 
shortly  pedicellate,  solitary  in  the  upper  axils,  either  in  terminal  leafy  heads  or 


578 


LI.  MYRTACE^E. 


[Calythrix. 


more  frequently  below  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Bracteoles  persistent,  rigid, 
continuous  with  the  thickened  pedicels,  and  often  united  at  the  base  into  a 
turbinate  cup,  and  in  the  free  part  overlapping  each  other  and  enclosing  the  base 
or  nearly  the  whole  of  the  calyx-tube. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  has  been  divided  by  some  according  to  the  presence  or 
absence  of  stipules,  but  this  character  is  wholly  unavailable  in  practice.  The  stipules,  when 
present,  are  rudimentary  only,  and  so  minute  and  fugacious,  that  it  is  often  impossible  to 
discover  them  in  some  specimens  of  species  where  they  are  occasionally  the  most  conspicuous. 
Other  botanists,  again,  have,  from  the  number  of  stamens,  distributed  the  species  into 
decandrous  and  icosandrous,  or  even  given  in  the  diagnosis  stamens  8,  10,  20,  or  about  40,  but 
I have  found  them  to  vary  in  this  respect  in  all  the  species.  The  majority  have  above  30 
stamens,  whilst  in  the  few  supposed  to  be  decandrous,  the  number  varies  from  7 to  about  15,  and 
are  not  arranged  in  any  regular  relation  to  the  sepals  and  petals,  as  in  the  genera  with  definite 
stamens.  The  colour  of  the  flowers  appears  to  be  constant  in  individual  species,  yellow  in  some, 
pink  or  lilac  in  others,  white  in  C.  tetragona,  but  not  of  sufficient  importance  to  be  available  for 
sectional  grouping.  The  most  tangible  character  I have  found  lies  in  the  shape  of  the  calyx- 
tube  and  its  relation  to  the  ovary,  although  it  is  often  difficult  to  verify  it  without  a careful 
analysis,  and,  in  habit,  the  majority  of  the  species  are  very  much  alike. — Benth. 

A.  Calyx-tube  slender,  slightly  fusiform  and  adnate  to  the  ovary  below  the  middle,  the  upper 
slender  part  terete,  free,  enclosing  the  base  of  the  style,  which  is  usually  persistent,  the  staminal 


disk  forming  a ring  round  it  but  free  from  it. 

Bracteoles  much  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube,  connate,  from  quarter  to  half 
their  length. 

Leaves  from  under  4 line  to  about  1 line  long,  minutely  ciliate  and  usually 

acute  and  prominently  keeled.  Petals  narrow,  acute 1.  C,  microphylla. 

Leaves  mostly  about  2 lines  long,  acutely  keeled  and  often  minutely  ciliate  2.  C.  longirlora. 
Leaves  slender,  semiterete,  2 to  4 lines  long,  crowded,  not  ciliate  . . . 3.  C.  leptophylla. 


B.  Calyx-tube  slender,  slightly  fusiform  and  adnate  to  the  ovary  beloiv  the  middle,  the  upper 
slender  part  terete,  solid  inside,  terminating  in  a short  broadly  campanulate  or  turbinate  free 
portion. 

Flowers  white,  usually  in  terminal  leafy  heads  or  short  spikes 4.  C.  tetragona. 

C.  Calyx-tube  pubescent,  oblong,  more  or  less  contracted  above  the  ovary,  the  free  part  short; 
lobes  with  very  short  awns  or  points. 

Calyx-tube  nearly  glabrous,  line  long,  slightly  contracted  above  the  ovary. 

Leaves  very  fine,  2 to  3 lines  long 5.  C.  laricina. 

1.  C.  microphylla  (small-leaved),  A.  Cunn.  in  But.  May.  under  n.  8323  ; 

Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  49.  A tall  shrub,  or,  on  banks  of  streams,  a small 

tree,  with  numerous  small  branchlets  covered  with  imbricated  leaves. 

Leaves  thick  and  triquetrous,  from  under  § line  long  and  almost  obtuse, 
to  above  1 line  long  and  acute,  more  or  less  ciliate  with  very  short  rigid 
hairs,  or  when  luxuriant  quite  glabrous.  Flowers  (of  a rich  red  ?)  on  thick 
pedicels  of  about  a line  in  the  upper  axils  of  the  short  branchlets,  forming  showy 
corymbose  or  oblong  leafy  panicles.  Bracteoles  about  2 lines  long,  setaceous- 
acuminate,  connate  at  the  base.  Calyx-tube  scarcely  3 lines  long  when  first 
flowering,  but  lengthening  to  5 lines,  slightly  fusiform  below  the  middle,  the 
slender  upper  portion  free,  enclosing  the  style  ; lobes  ovate,  acuminate,  wdth  hair- 
like awns  from  half  the  length  of  to  longer  than  the  petals.  Petals  narrow, 
acute,  4 to  5 lines  long.  Stamens  numerous ; connective-gland  small. — Schau. 
Myrt.  Xeroc.  89 ; C.  exstipulata,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  208,  according  to  Schauer ; 
C.  cupressifolia,  A.  Rich.  Sert.  Astrol.  41,  t.  16  C.  ( cupressoides,  A.  Rich.  l.c.  43). 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brdicn. 

2.  C.  longiflora  (flowers  long),  F.  v.  M.  Fratjm.  i.  12  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
49.  A tall  handsome  shrub,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  oblong-linear  or  cuneate, 
obtuse  or  shortly  mucronate,  l\  to  2 lines  long,  or  nearly  3 lines  on  luxuriant 
shoots,  rigid  with  acute  denticulate-ciliate  margins,  and  a very  prominent  acute 
keel.  Flowers  large  (pink  ?)  on  short  thick  pedicels,  in  the  axils  of  small  floral 
leaves,  forming  terminal  heads  on  the  short  branchlets.  Bracteoles  about  14  line 


Calythrix .] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


579 


long,  connate  at  the  base,  truncate  and  finely  mucronate.  Calyx-tube  attaining 
6 lines,  cylindrical,  the  adnate  portion  scarcely  fusiform,  the  upper  free  portion 
about  as  long,  not  more  slender,  enclosing  the  style  ; lobes  short,  broad,  with 
long  hair-like  awns.  Petals  acute,  4 to  5 lines  long.  Stamens  very  numerous  ; 
connective-gland  small. 

Hab.:  In  the  interior,  Mitchell : Suttor  River,  F.  r.  Mueller. 

3.  C.  leptophylla  (leaves  slender),  Benth.  Ft.  Austr.  iii.  50.  Quite  glabrous. 
Leaves  crowded  on  the  short  branchlets,  slender,  linear,  semiterete  or  triquetrous, 
obtuse  or  scarcely  mucronate,  mostly  about  2 lines.  Flowers  (pink  ?)  nearly 
sessile  in  the  upper  axils,  much  smaller  than  in  C.  longiflora,  but  otherwise 
similar.  Bracteoles  connate  below  the  middle,  acutely  acuminate,  about  2 lines 
long.  Calyx-tube  slender,  about  4 lines  long,  the  lower  portion  scarcely  fusiform, 
the  upper  cylindrical  portion  free,  enclosing  the  style.  Petals  and  stamens 
not  seen. 

Hal>.:  Newcastle  Range,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

A single  specimen  snatched  in  breaking  through  the  scrub,  and  communicated  under  the 
name  of  C.  tenuifolia,  which  is  now,  however,  preocuppied  by  a species  of  Meissner’s.  It  is 
evidently  very  near  C.  longiflora  and  G.  microphylla,  but  can  scarcely  be  considered  as  conspecific 
with  either. — Benth. 

4.  C.  tetragona  (four-angled),  Labill.  PI.  Nov.  Holl.  ii.  8,  t.  146  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  50.  An  elegant  shrub,  usually  of  2 or  3ft.,  but  sometimes 
drawn  up  to  a much  greater  height,  glabrous  pubescent  or  hirsute  with  short 
rigid  hairs,  the  branches  virgate  or  spreading.  Leaves  erect  or  spreading,  linear, 
triquetrous  or  convex  underneath,  obtuse  or  mucronulate,  mostly  2 to  3 lines 
long,  or  when  luxuriant  nearly  twice  as  long,  the  stipules  which  have  been  chiefly 
observed  in  this  species  so  minute  and  deciduous  as  to  be  rarely  seen.  Flowers 
white  or  pink,  nearly  sessile  in  the  upper  axils,  forming  dense  terminal  short  or 
oblong  leafy  heads,  becoming  lateral  by  the  elongation  of  the  shoots,  especially 
in  poor  cultivated  specimens.  Bracteoles  free,  scarious,  keeled,  about  2 lines 
long.  Calyx-tube  about  2 lines  at  the  time  of  flowering,  lengthening  out  to  4 
lines  or  even  more,  the  lower  portion  fusiform,  produced  into  a long  slender  solid 
neck  or  stipes  to  the  short  campanulate  or  turbinate  free  part ; lobes  ovate,  with 
fine  awns  longer  than  the  petals.  Petals  obtuse,  about  2 lines  long.  Stamens 
usually  above  20  ; connective  gland  small.  Style  inserted  on  the  summit  of  the 
solid  neck  of  the  calyx. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  36  ; C.  glabra,  R.  Br.  in  Bot.  Reg. 
t.  409  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  586;  Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  127  ; C.  glabra,  C.  tetra- 
ptera,  and  C.  scabra,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  208  ; Mem.  Myrt.  t.  1 ; C.  ericoides,  A.  Cunn. 
in  Field,  N.  S.  Wales,  350;  <J.  virgata,  A.  Cunn.  in  Bot.  Mag.  t.  3323; 
C.  brunioides,  A.  Cunn.  in  Bot.  Mag.  under  the  same  n.;  C.  Billardierii , C. 
virgata,  C.  scabra,  and  C.  brunioides,  Schau.  Myrt.  Xeroc.  93  to  97  ; C.  Brown'd, 
Schau.  l.c.  108,  and  probably  C.  Baueri,  Schau.  l.c.  109  ; C.  pubescens,  Sweet  in 
G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  811;  C.  Behriana,  Schlecht.  Linn*,  xx.  650;  C.  Schlechten- 
dahlii,  G.  rosea,  C.  leucantha,  C.  squarrosa,  C.  monticola,  G.  Muelleri,  Miq.  in 
Nederl.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  116  to  119. 

Hab.:  Stanthorpe  and  other  inland  localities. 

This  is  undoubtedly  a variable  species,  and  individual  specimens  often  exhibit  very  striking 
differences,  but  the  numerous  species  founded  upon  it  have  been  chiefly  distinguished  by  the 
degree  of  pubescence,  by  the  size  and  direction  of  the  leaves,  the  length  of  the  calyx-tube,  and 
other  characters,  often  dependent  on  age,  luxuriance,  or  local  circumstances,  and  which,  in  the 
large  mass  of  specimens  I have  examined,  show  such  insensible  gradations  that  I have  in  vain 
sought  to  class  them  in  distinct  varieties  by  any  tangible  characters.  Amidst  all  these  variations, 
this  species  is  reaiily  distinguished  by  the  short  free  part  of  the  calyx  always  much  broader  than 
the  neck  of  the  adnate  part,  although  it  varies  from  narrow  campanulate  to  very  broadly 
turbinate. — Benth. 


580 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


[Calythrix. 


5.  C.  laricina  (Larch-like),  B.  Br.;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  52.  A much- 
branched  shrub,  spreading,  and  scarcely  lift,  high  in  barren  open  places, 
attaining  6 to  7ft.  in  moist  situations.  Leaves  linear,  subulate,  slender, 
triquetrous,  mucronate,  2 to  8 lines  long,  crowded  on  the  smaller  branchlets. 
Flowers  small,  nearly  sessile,  crowded  below  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Bracts 
truncate  or  shortly  acuminate,  ciliate,  much  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube.  Calyx- 
tube  about  If  lines  long,  pubescent  or  nearly  glabrous,  the  free  part  scarcely 
contracted  ; lobes  at  first  broadly  lanceolate,  ciliate,  not  so  long  as  the  tube,  the 
short  awn  scarcely  exceeding  the  cilia,  after  flowering  the  lobes  are  longer  and 
taper  into  a more  prominent  awn. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria.  R.  Brown. 


5.  HOMALOCALYX,  F.  v.  Muell. 

(Calyx  smooth.) 

Calyx-tube  cylindrical  or  turbinate,  the  upper  free  part  short  and  broad  ; lobes 
5,  petal-like,  entire,  deciduous.  Petals  5,  entire,  deciduous.  Stamens  indefinite, 
few  or  many,  free,  deciduous,  the  inner  ones  shorter,  filaments  filiform  ; anthers 
with  two  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally,  the  connective  thickened  into  a 
terminal  gland.  Ovary  1-celled,  with  2 ovules  on  a short  basal  excentrical 
placenta.  Style  filiform,  glabrous  with  a small  capitate  stigma.  Fruit  . . . — 
Heath-like  glabrous  shrubs.  Leaves  scattered  (not  opposite),  usually  crowded, 
small,  entire.  Flowers  nearly  sessile  along  the  branches,  solitary  in  the  axils  of 
the  leaves.  Bracteoles  broad,  usually  persistent. 

A small  genus,  limited  to  Australia,  allied  to  Lhotzkya  (a  South  Australian,  Victorian,  and 
West  Australian  genus,  but  so  far  not  met  with  in  Queensland)  in  its  petals  and  stamens,  and  in 
some  measure  to  Thryptomene  in  the  ovary,  differing  from  both  in  the  deciduous  calyx-lobes. 
The  ripe  fruit  is  unknown,  but  in  the  farthest  advanced  state  that  I have  seen  there  is  no 
tendency  to  the  hardening  of  the  endocarp  as  in  Thryptomene. — Bentli. 

Leaves  linear,  mucronate.  Calyx-tube  cylindrical,  lobes  and  petals  acute. 

Stamens  9 to  15 1 . H.  ericaus. 

Leaves  oblong-triquetrous,  obtuse.  Calyx-tube  broadly  turbinate,  lobes  and 

petals  broad,  obtuse.  Stamens  20  to  30 2.  H.  polyandrns. 

1.  H.  ericaeus  (Heath-like),  F.  v.  M.  in  Hook.  Kew  Journ.  ix.  309;  Bentli. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  56.  A small  shrub,  erect,  with  slender  virgate  branches,  or 
spreading  and  almost  procumbent.  Leaves  crowded,  linear,  rigid,  acutely 
triquetrous  or  concave,  mucronate,  f to  fin.  long.  Flowers  nearly  sessile,  or 
shortly  pedicellate  in  the  upper  axils.  Bracteoles  broad,  much  shorter  than  the 
calyx-tube,  veined,  scarious  only  at  the  edges.  Calyx-tube  oblong-cylindrical, 
If  line  long  in  flower,  longer  afterwards,  the  free  part  short ; lobes  lanceolate, 
acute,  about  1 line  long,  very  deciduous.  Petals  similar  to  the  calyx-lobes,  but 
rather  longer.  Stamens  9 to  15  ; anthers  small.  Ovules  2,  collateral,  erect  on  a 
short  basal  excentrical  placenta,  which  does  not  appear  to  be  continued  beyond 
the  ovules.  Young  fruit  1-seeded,  enclosed  in  the  enlarged  truncate  calyx-tube. 
Thryptomene  homalocalyx,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  68. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 

2.  H.  polyandrus  (stamens  numerous),  F.  v.  M.  Herb  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  56.  Leaves  erect,  oblong,  triquetrous,  very  obtuse,  If  to  2 lines  long. 
Flowers  on  very  short  pedicels  in  the  upper  axils.  Bracteoles  persistent,  very 
broad,  keeled,  scarious,  forming  a truncate  cup  enclosing  the  calyx.  Calyx-tube 
very  short,  broadly  turbinate ; lobes  orbicular,  nearly  If  line  diameter.  Petals 
about  the  same,  and  apparently  falling  off  with  them.  Stamens  20  to  30, 
crowded  almost  into  a single  row  ; the  filaments  all  short,  but  the  inner  ones  still 
shorter  and  more  indexed  ; anthers  small  with  a rather  large  gland  to  the 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


581 


Homalocalyx .] 


connective.  Ovary  very  short  and  broad  in  the  base  of  the  calyx-tube,  with  2 
ovules  erect  on  a short  basal  placenta. — Thryptomene  polyandra,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm. 
iv.  77. 

Hab.:  Without  locality,  Leichhardt. 

The  specimens  are  not  good,  most  of  the  flowers  injured  or  deformed  by  insects,  but  the  best 
appear  to  have  the  calyx-lobes,  petals,  and  stamens  very  deciduous,  as  in  H.  ericaus,  leaving  a 
truncate  fruiting-calyx  concealed  within  the  persistent  bracteoles. — Bentli. 


6.  THRYPTOMENE,  Endl. 

(Derivation  obscure.) 

(Paryphanthe,  Schau.;  Astrsea,  Schau.;  Eremopyxis,  Baill.) 

Calyx-tube  hemispherical  turbinate,  ovoid  or  shortly  cylindrical,  adnate  to  the 
top  or  the  free  part  broader ; lobes  5,  persistent  (unless  the  free  part  of  the  calyx 
falls  off),  petal-like  or  scarious,  spreading,  entire.  Petals  5,  persistent,  usually 
connivent  over  the  stamens.  Stamens  5,  alternate  with  the  petals,  or  10,  often 
inserted  within  the  margin  of  the  disk  ; filaments  short ; anther-cells  globular  or 
obovoid,  separately  inserted  on  the  connective  and  usually  pendulous,  either 
smooth  and  opening  by  pores  or  furrowed  and  opening  by  pores  or  short  slits  in  the 
furrow.  Ovary  inferior,  1 -celled,  the  cavity  usually  small  near  the  top  of  the 
calyx-tube,  with  2 or  rarely  4 ovules  on  a short  basal  placenta  either  excentrical 
or  adhering  to  one  side  of  the  cavity,  or  rarely  the  cavity  occupies  the  greater 
part  of  the  tube,  with  several  ovules  in  2 rows  on  a lateral  placenta.  Style  short, 
glabrous,  with  a small  capitate  stigma.  Fruit,  where  known,  formed  by  the 
hardened  but  scarcely  enlarged  base  of  the  calyx  crowned  by  the  persistent  calyx- 
lobes  and  petals  ; endocarp  cartilaginous  or  hardened,  usually  globular,  indehis- 
cent  or  separating  into  2 cocci  open  on  the  inner  face,  containing  either  1 globular 
or  2 hemispherical  or  slightly  reniform  seeds  ; testa  very  thin  ; embryo  folded, 
the  radicular  end  very  thick,  the  other  fold  much  shorter,  narrow  with  ovate  coty- 
ledons.—Heath-like  glabrous  shrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  small,  entire.  Flowers 
axillary,  solitary,  or  rarely  2 or  3 in  the  same  axil,  small,  nearly  sessile  or 
pedicellate.  Bracteoles  2 under  the  calyx,  scarious  or  green  in  the  centre,  usually 
small  and  in  many  species  so  deciduous  as  to  be  rarely  found  on  the  specimens. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  With  the  habit  of  Backea,  it  has  most  of  the  characteristics 
of  the  Chamcclauciea,  with  peculiar  anthers.  The  hardened  endocarp  appears  also  to  be  charac- 
teristic, but  perfect  fruits  have  only  been  seen  in  a very  few  species,  and  very  frequently  the 
seeds  are  abortive,  although  enlarged  and  converted  into  a hard  granular  apparently  homogeneous 
mass.  In  some  species,  where  the  cavity  of  the  ovary  is  very  small  and  quite  at  the  summit  of 
the  calyx-tube,  the  ovules,  although  really  arising  from  the  base  of  the  cavity,  appear  as  they 
enlarge  into  the  lower  part  of  the  tube  to  be  pendulous,  but  when  examined  at  the  time  of 
flowering  I have  never  found  them  to  be  really  pendulous  as  in  Micromyrtus. — Bentli. 

1.  T.  oligandra  (flowers  few),  F.  v.  M.  Fraym.  i.  11  ; Bentli.  FI.  Anstr.  iii. 
63.  Arborescent,  with  numerous  slender  rigid  branchlets.  Leaves  spreading, 
broadly  ovate  or  obovate,  flat  with  the  midrib  and  often  the  primary  veins 
conspicuous  underneath,  very  obtuse,  2 to  3 lines  long.  Flowers  almost  sessile, 
solitary  or  2 or  3 together  in  each  axil  along  the  branchlets.  Bracteoles  orbicular, 
small.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  prominently  10-ribbed  ; lobes  petal-like,  spreading 
to  about  2 lines  diameter.  Petals  rather  shorter  than  the  calyx-lobes,  connivent. 
Stamens  5,  opposite  the  sepals ; anther-cells  violet,  globular,  distinct,  furrowed, 
opening  in  short  slits ; connective-gland  prominent.  Ovules  2,  on  a lateral 
almost  basal  placenta  in  a small  cavity  near  the  top  of  the  calyx-tube. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  If . Brown ; Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander, 
A.  Cunningham ; sandstone  tableland  on  the  Suttor,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Lizard  Island,  M'Gillivray. 

Var.  parviflora,  F.  v.  M.  Leaves  linear-oblong  or  cuneate,  erect  or  spreading  at  the  top, 
obtuse  or  mucronulate,  1 to  2 lines  long,  concave  above,  convex  underneath,  without  any 
prominent  midrib.  Flowers  very  small,  nearly  sessile  and  solitary  in  the  upper  axils.  Bracteoles 


582 


LI.  MYRTACE^. 


[Thryptomene. 


ovate,  very  deciduous.  Calyx-tube  scarcely  £ line  long,  the  flowers  otherwise  as  in  T.  oliyandra. 
Hab.:  Barren  places,  Gilbert  River,  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  V.  v.  Mueller.  The  foliage,  like  that  of 
some  Epacridece,  and  the  very  small  flowers,  seem  almost  sufficient  to  characterise  a distinct 
species. — Benth. 


7.  MICROMYRTUS,  Benth. 

(A  small  Myrtle.) 

Calyx-tube  cylindrical  or  turbinate,  5 or  10-ribbed ; lobes  small,  petal-like  or 
scarious,  persistent,  sometimes  reduced  to  a narrow  or  scarcely  distinguishable 
border.  Petals  5,  obovate  or  orbicular,  deciduous  or  rarely  persistent  and  spread- 
ing. Stamens  5 opposite  the  petals,  or  10,  those  opposite  the  sepals  inserted 
usually  within  the  margin  of  the  disk ; anther-cells  distinct,  almost  globular, 
opening  in  parallel  divergent  or  divaricate  slits.  Ovary  adnate,  1 -celled  ; style 
short,  filiform,  glabrous,  with  a capitate  stigma  ; ovules  2,  or  rarely  4 to  8, 
collaterally  attached  at  or  near  the  summit  of  a filiform  placenta  extending  from 
the  base  to  the  top  of  the  cavity.  Fruit  enclosed  in  the  hardened  scarcely 
enlarged  calyx-tube  and  crowned  by  the  limb,  indehiscent.  Seed  solitary,  filling 
the  fruit ; testa  thin  ; embryo  of  the  shape  of  the  seed,  consisting  chiefly  of  the 
thick  fleshy  clavate  radicular  portion  with  a short  slender  neck  turned  up  against 
one  side,  and  rather  deeply  divided  into  2 linear  cotyledons. — Glabrous  shrubs, 
with  the  habit  of  the  small-leaved  or  more  slender  species  of  Bceckea.  Leaves 
opposite,  small,  entire.  Flowers  small,  white  or  pink,  solitary  and  shortly 
pedicellate  or  almost  sessile  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves.  Bracteoles  2,  scarious, 
close  under  the  calyx,  often  enclosing  the  bud,  but  very  deciduous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  is  nearly  allied  to  Thryptomene,  but  differs  essentially  in 
the  ovules  and  in  the  placentation,  and  in  most  cases  in  the  very  deciduous  petals.  The  stamens 
also,  when  5,  are  opposite  the  petals,  not  alternate  with  them,  and  the  fruit  never  appears  to 
have  the  hardened  endocarp  observable  in  many  species  of  Thryptomene. — Benth. 

Stamens  5.  Petals  often  persistent.  Ovules  2,  4,  or  more. 

Calyx-tube  ovate-turbinate,  not  exceeding  1 line.  Ovules  4 1.  M.  microphylla. 

Calyx-tube  narrow,  exceeding  1 line.  Ovules  6 to  8 2.  M.  leptocalyx. 

1.  IVT.  microphylla  (small-leaved),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  65.  Erect  or 
diffuse  and  much-branched.  Leaves  usually  obovate-triquetrous,  rather  thick, 
very  obtuse,  and  under  1 line  long,  but  sometimes  passing  from  that  to  nearly 
linear,  semiterete  and  nearly  2 lines  long,  decussate  on  the  smaller  branches,  the 
upper  ones  sometimes  minutely  dentate-cil'ate.  Flowers  nearly  sessile  in  the 
upper  axils,  usually  forming  numerous  little  almost  corymbose  leafy  racemes  on 
the  smaller  branches.  Bracteoles  short,  concave,  keeled.  Calyx-tube  ovoid- 
turbinate,  prominently  5-ribbed,  about  1 line  long ; lobes  orbicular,  scarious,  £ to 
f line  long.  Petals  orbicular,  spreading,  deciduous  or  sometimes  persistent, 
about  1 line  diameter.  Stamens  5,  opposite  the  petals  ; filaments  filiform,  rather 
thick  ; anther-cells  parallel,  opening  longitudinally  ; connective  tipped  with  1 or 
2 globular  glands,  rarely  both  wanting.  Ovules  4,  suspended  in  pairs  from  the 
top  of  the  cavity.  Embryo  with  the  slender  portion  half  as  long  as  the  thick 
radicular  end  and  deeply  2-lobed. — Imbricaria  ciliata,  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc. 
iii.  259 ; Stereoxylon  eiliatum,  Poir.  Diet.  Suppl.  v.  247  ; Escallonia  ciliata,  Roem. 
and  Sehult.  Syst.  v.  329  ; Bceckea  microphylla,  Sieb.  in  Spreng.  Syst.  Cur.  Post. 
149,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  230,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  30;  B.  plicata,  F.  v.  M.  Fragtn.  i.  30; 
Thryptomene  plicata,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  63. 

Hab.:  Many  southern  localities. 

2.  1VI.  leptocalyx  (calyx  slender),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  65.  A bushy 
shrub,  attaining  about  6ft.  Leaves  linear-triquetrous,  decussate  and  imbricate 
on  the  smaller  branches  as  in  3/.  microphylla,  but  rather  longer.  Flowers  larger 
than  in  that  species,  on  pedicels  either  exceedingly  short  or  sometimes  attaining 


Micromyrtus.] 


LI.  MYRTACE/E. 


583 


1 line.  Calyx-tube  narrow-turbinate,  attaining  1J  line  ; lobes  orbicular,  scarious, 
about  half  as  long  as  the  petals.  Stamens  5,  opposite  the  petals.  Ovary  1-celled 
with  a cluster  of  6 to  8 ovules  suspended  from  the  top  of  the  cavity  on  a filiform 
placenta  arising  from  the  base  as  in  .V.  tnicrophylla. — Backed  leptocalyx,  F.  v.  M. 
Fragrn.  i.  30. 

Hab.:  Near  Mount  Pluto,  Mitchell. 


8.  B/ECKEA,  Linn. 

(After  A.  B;eck.) 

'Jungia,  Geertn.;  Imbricaria,  Sm . : Schidiomyrtus,  Binzia,  Euryomyrtus,  Camphoromyrtus, 

Tetrapora,  Harmogia,  and  Oxymyrrhine,  Schau.;  Babingtonia,  Lindl.;  Ericomyrtus,  Turcz.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate  or  hemispherical,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base,  the  free 
part  broad  and  open  ; lobes  5,  imbricate,  continuous  with  the  tube  or  more  or 
less  scarious,  usually  persistent.  Petals  5,  broadly  obovate  or  orbicular,  longer 
than  the  calyx-lobes,  spreading.  Stamens  rarely  exceeding  20  and  often  under  10, 
free,  in  a single  row  round  the  margin  of  the  disk,  and  usually  horizontally 
inflected  in  the  bud.  Filaments  filiform  or  flat ; anther-cells  united  or  distinct, 
opening  in  longitudinal  slits  or  in  small  pores.  Ovary  adnate  to  the  lower  part 
of  the  calyx-tube  or  enclosed  in  it,  and  rather  more  or  less  convex  at  the  top  or 
semiadnate  or  free  except  the  broad  base,  2 or  3-celled,  with  2 collateral  or  several 
ovules  in  each  cell,  in  2 rows  or  in  a ring  round  a more  or  less  peltate  placenta  ; 
style  filiform,  glabrous,  inserted  in  a deep  tubular  or  rarely  shallow  depression  in 
the  centre  of  the  ovary  ; stigma  capitate  or  peltate.  Capsule  partially  or  wholly 
superior,  enclosed  in  the  scarcely  enlarged  calyx-tube,  opening  at  the  top  locu- 
licidally  in  2 or  3 valves.  Seeds  either  1 or  2 in  each  cell  and  reniform,  or 
several  and  more  or  less  angular;  testa  thin  or  slightly  crustaceous;  embryo 
filling  the  seed,  the  radicular  portion  thick  and  clavate,  with  a slender  short  neck 
folded  against  the  side  and  shortly  divided  into  2 ovate  or  oblong  cotyledons. — 
Heath-like  "glabrous  shrubs.  Leaves  small,  opposite,  entire.  Flowers  small, 
white  or  pink,  either  solitary  in  the  axils  on  a peduncle  articulate  at,  above,  or 
rarely  below  the  middle,  with  2 small  bracteoles  at  the  articulation,  or  several 
together  on  a short  common  peduncle  with  a small  bract  at  the  base  of  each 
pedicel. 

The  genus  is  chiefly  Australian,  but  one  of  the  common  East  Australian  species  extends  into 
New  Caledonia,  and  2 or  3 others  not  Australian  are  found  in  New  Caledonia  or  in  the  Indian 
Archipelago  and  S.  China. — Benth. 

Much  as  several  of  the  species  differ  from  each  other  in  the  stamens  as  well  as  in  the  ovary, 
it  is  exceedingly  difficult  to  distribute  the  whole  into  good  sections,  for  the  different  forms 
appear  either  to  pass  into  each  other  by  almost  insensible  gradations,  or  to  be  strictly  monotypic, 
and  none  have  appeared  to  me  to  be  sufficiently  accompanied  by  differences  in  habit  or  by  any 
combination  of  characters  to  justify  the  adoption  of  any  of  the  long  list  of  separate  genera 
proposed  by  Schauer  and  others.  The  presence  or  absence  of  the  five  stamens  opposed  to  the 
petals  is  perhaps  the  most  marked,  but  even  that  appears  to  be  uncertain  in  the  few  cases  where 
the  stamens  exceed  20. — Benth. 

Stamens  few  or  numerous,  hut  none  opposite  the  centre  of  the  petals,  excepting  very  rarely,  when 
there  are  more  than  20.  Ovules  several  in  each  cell. 

Section  I.  Schidiomyrtus. — Anther-cells  distinct,  parallel,  openiny  longitudinally  to  the 


base.  Flowers  solitary.  Ovary  2 -celled. 

Leaves  broadly  ovate  or  orbicular,  flat  or  concave,  1£  to  3 lines  long  . . . 1 . B.  crenulata. 

Leaves  concave,  from  narrow-obovate  and  1 line  to  to  linear-cuneate  and  3 

lines  long.  Calyx-lobes  dentieulate-ciliate 2.  B.  diosmifolia. 

Leaves  linear-subulate,  usually  long. 

Calyx-tube  broadly  turbinate.  Stamens  10  to  15 3.  B.  linijolia. 

Calyx-tube  narrow-turbinate  Stamens  about  5.  Flowers  very  small  . . 4.  B.  stenophylla. 


Section  II.  Harmogia. — Anther-cells  distinct,  nearly  globular;  deeply  furrowed,  parallel 
or  divergent,  and  opening  more  or  less  in  longitudinal  slits  in  the  furrows.  Ovary  S-celled,  with 
several  ovules  in  each  cell. 


Part  II.  S 


584  LI.  MYRTACEiE.  [Barked. 

Leaves  flat.  Flowers  often  clustered  or  umbellate. 

Leaves  linear-lanceolate  or  narrow-oblong,  4 lines  to  lin.  long.  Flowers 

mostly  in  pedunculate  umbels 5.  B.  virgata. 

Leaves  slender,  mostly  imbricate-decussate  or  short,  the  recurved  points 
minute  or  none.  Filaments  not  clavate.  Slits  of  anther-cells  almost 
shortened  to  pores G . B.  tlensifolia. 


1.  B.  crenulata  (leaves  crenulate),  DC.  Prod.  iii.  230;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  78. 
Branches  virgate.  Leaves  broadly  obovate  or  orbicular,  flat  or  concave,  obtuse 
or  almost  acute,  usually  minutely  denticulate-ciliate,  often  imbricate,  If  to  nearly 
8 lines  long,  the  floral  ones  mostly  longer  than  the  others.  Flowers  nearly 
sessile  along  the  branches,  solitary  in  each  axil,  shorter  than  or  scarcely  exceed- 
ing the  leaves.  Bracteoles  ovate-lanceolate,  concave,  deciduous.  Calyx-tube 
about  1 line  long,  the  adnate  part  narrow-turbinate,  the  free  part  broad  ; lobes 
ovate,  f line  long,  slightly  scarious  on  the  edges.  Petals  shortly  exceeding  the 
calyx-lobes.  Stamens  10  or  fewer,  not  opposite  the  centre  of  the  petals  ; anthers 
small,  didymous,  the  cells  opening  longitudinally  ; connective-gland  inconspicuous. 
Ovary  2-celled,  with  6 to  10  ovules  in  each  cell ; style  shortly  immersed.  Seeds 
obovoid,  more  or  less  angular  ; testa  thinly  crustaceous ; thin  end  of  the  embryo 
closely  folded  against  the  radicle,  otherwise  straight. — R.  Br.  in  Flind.  Voy.  App. 
548  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  65  ; Jungia  imbricata,  Gaertn.  Fruct.  i.  175  t.  35 
(incorrect  as  to  the  details)  ; Mollia  imbricata,  Gmel.  Syst.  Veg.  420;  Imbricaria 
crenulata,  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  259  ; Stereoxylon  crenulatum,  Poir.  Diet. 
Suppl.  v.  246;  Escallonia  crenulata,  Rcem.  and  Schult.  Syst.  v.  329;  Backed 
tliosmoides,  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  iii.  230;  Schidiomyrtus  crenulata  and  S.  Sieberi, 
Schau.  in  Linnsea,  xvii.  237. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay. 

Var.  tenella.  Leaves  smaller;  flowers  very  much  smaller,  but  not  otherwise  different.— 
dungia  tenella,  Geertn.  Fruct.  i.  175.  With  the  larger  variety  from  most  collectors. 

2.  B.  diosmifolia  (Diosma-leaved),  Budge  in  Tram.  Linn.  Soc.  viii.  298  t. 
13  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  79.  Erect  or  diffuse  and  much  branched,  from  a thick 
woody  stock.  Leaves  linear,  narrow,  oblong,  or  somewhat  cuneate,  concave  or 
semiterete,  obtuse  or  mucronulate-acute,  more  or  less  denticulate-ciliate,  1 to  2 
lines  long.  Flowers  nearly  sessile  and  solitary  in  the  upper  axils.  Bracteoles 
ohovate-cuneate,  concave,  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube,  very  deciduous.  Calyx-tube 
turbinate,  about  14-  line  long ; lobes  ovate,  denticulate-ciliate.  Petals  about  1 
line  diameter.  Stamens  7 to  10,  none  opposite  the  centre  of  the  petals ; filaments 
filiform  ; anther-cells  parallel,  opening  longitudinally  ; connective-gland  globular. 
Ovary  small,  2-celled,  with  about  4 ovules  in  each  cell.— DC.  Prod.  iii.  230  ; F. 
v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  29. 

Hab.:  Southern  border,  Edwin  Hickey. 

3.  B.  linifolia  (Flax-leaved),  Budge  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  viii.  297  t.  12  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  80.  Tall  and  erect,  with  slender  virgate  branches.  Leaves 
very  narrow-linear,  semiterete  or  concave,  acute,  in  some  specimens  all  above 
fin.,  attaining  f or  even  lin.,  in  others  mostly  f to  fin.  long.  Flowers  small, 
solitary  in  the  upper  axils,  almost  sessile  or  on  pedicels  rarely  attaining  1 line. 
Calyx-tube  turbinate  or  at  length  almost  urceolate  ; lobes  very  broad  and  short, 
scarcely  pointed.  Petals  about  1 line  diameter.  Stamens  10  to  15,  none  opposite 
the  centre  of  the  petals  ; filaments  filiform  ; anther-cells  parallel,  opening  longi- 
tudinally ; connective-gland  small.  Ovary  flat-topped,  2-celled,  with  15  to  20 
ovules  in  each  cell  round  an  orbicular  almost  peltate  placenta.  Capsule  separating 
readily  from  the  calyx-tube.  Seeds  small,  angular.  Embryo  with  the  slender 
cotyledonar  end  closely  folded  against  the  radicle,  but  otherwise  straight. — DC. 
Prod.  iii.  229  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  71  ; B.  tricliophylla,  Sieb.  in  Spreng.  Syst. 
Cur.  Post.  149. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  H.  Simmonds, 


Backed.] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


080 


4.  B.  Stenophylla  (leaves  slender),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  13  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  80.  Branches  slender,  virgate.  Leaves  slender,  linear,  semiterete,  obtuse,  2, 
3 or  rarely  4 lines  long,  mostly  crowded  or  clustered  on  the  short  axillary  shoots. 
Flowers  very  small,  shortly  pedicellate,  solitary  in  each  axil,  but  often  forming 
little  leafy  corymbs,  on  short  axillary  shoots.  Bracteoles  narrow,  at  the  base  of 
the  pedicel.  Calyx-tube  narrow-turbinate,  f line  long ; lobes  small,  broad,  very 
obtuse.  Petals  about  J line  diameter.  Stamens  5 or  6,  none  opposite  the  centre 
of  the  petals ; filaments  filiform ; anther- cells  parallel,  opening  longitudinally ; 
connective-gland  inconspicuous.  Ovary  2-celled,  with  16  to  20  ovules  closely 
packed  round  an  oblong  somewhat  peltate  placenta. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Moreton  Bay. 

This  differs  chiefly  from  B.  linifolia  in  its  slender  habit  and  foliage  and  small  narrow  flowers. 
Both  are  nearly  allied  to  B.  frutescens,  Linn.,  a common  species  in  the  Eastern  Archipelago  and 
S.  China,  distinguished  from  them  chiefly  by  the  more  open  calyx,  and  the  ovary  almost  always 
3-celled. — Benth. 

Yield  of  oil  from  dry  foliage,  4Joz.  per  cwt. — J.  F.  Bailey. 

5.  B.  virgata  (twiggy),  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  598  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  81. 
Usually  tall  erect  and  loosely  branched,  attaining  10  to  12ft.,  rarely  low  and 
diffuse.  Leaves  from  linear-lanceolate  to  narrow-oblong,  flat  and  often  1 or 
3-nerved,  usually  acute  and  J to  lin.  long,  but  in  some  specimens  all  under  Jin. 
long,  and  occasionally  some  or  nearly  all  obtuse,  both  in  the  short  and  long- 
leaved forms.  Flowers  small  in  the  upper  axils,  usually  several  together  in  a 
loose  umbel,  on  a common  peduncle  of  2 to  4 lines,  the  pedicels  varying  from  1 to 
3 lines.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  at  length  hemispherical,  about  1J  line  diameter  ; 
lobes  short  and  broad,  the  midrib  more  or  less  produced  into  a conical  point  or 
protuberance.  Petals  about  1J  line  diameter.  Stamens  5 to  15,  none  opposite 
the  centre  of  the  petals  ; filaments  filiform  ; anthers  didymous,  the  cells  globular, 
furrowed,  opening  in  short  slits  ; connective  thickened  into  a gland  almost  as  long 
as  the  cells.  Ovary  3-celled,  with  15  to  20  ovules  in  each  cell  round  a peltate 
placenta.  Capsule  nearly  flat-topped.  Seeds  usually  angular.  Embryo  with  the 
slender  inflected  end  very  short,  with  2 small  ovate  cotyledons. — DC.  Prod.  iii. 
229 ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  2127 ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab-  t.  341  ; Colla,  Hort.  Ripul.  t.  6 ; F.  v. 
M.  Fragm.  iv.  69;  Leptospermum  virgatum,  Forst.  Char.  Gen.  48;  Melaleuca 
virgata,  Linn.  fil.  Suppl.  343  ; Harmogia  virgata,  Schau.  in  Linnsea,  xvii.  238  ; 
Camphoromyrtus  pluri flora,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  i.  123  ; Harmogia 
umbellata,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  31  ; Bceckea  umhellata,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  69  ; 
Bahingtonia  virgata,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  74. 

Hab.:  Upper  Brisbane  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart;  Pine  Biver,  Fitzalan  ; 
Rockhampton,  Dallachy. 

The  species  is  also  in  New  Caledonia. — B.  parvula,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  229  ( Leptospermum  parvulum, 
Labill.  Sert.  Austr.  Caled.  62,  t.  61 ; Harmogia  parvula,  Schauer,  in  Linnasa,  xvii.  238),  also 
from  New  Caledonia,  is  a slight  variety,  only  differing  in  the  shorter  more  obtuse  leaves.  The 
same  variety,  with  even  still  shorter  oblong  leaves,  is  amongst  the  Queensland  specimens  com- 
municated by  Bidwill. — Benth. 

Var.  parvula.  Hab.:  Eumundi,  Bailey  and  Simmonds. 

6.  B.  densifolia  (densely  leaved),  8m.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  260;  Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  82.  Branches  rather  slender  but  rigid  and  virgate.  Leaves 
crowded  and  decussate  on  the  smaller  branches,  linear,  slender,  semiterete  or 
concave,  obtuse  or  with  a minute  recurved  point,  mostly  2 to  3 lines  long. 
Flowers  solitary  in  the  upper  axils,  often  forming  short  terminal  leafy  racemes 
or  corymbs.  Pedicels  1 to  2 lines  long,  with  a pair  of  small  deciduous  bracteoles 
below  the  middle.  Calyx-tube  broadly  turbinate ; lobes  short,  broadly  triangular. 
Petals  about  1J  line  diameter.  Stamens  usually  8 or  9,  but  sometimes  as  many 
as  12,  none  opposite  the  centre  of  the  petals  ; filaments  filiform  ; anthers  nearly 
globular,  the  cells  unequally  furrowed  and  opening  in  the  furrows  in  short  slits  ; 
connective-gland  conspicuous  or  small,  or  wholly  disappearing.  Ovary  flat- 
topped,  usually  3-celled,  with  about  8 ovules  in  each  cell  in  the  ordinary  form 


580 


LI.  MYRTACE/E. 


[ Bteckea . 


style  shortly  immersed,  f eeds  angular  ; embryo  with  the  slender  cotyledonar 
end  short  and  appressed  against  the  radicle,  otherwise  straight. — DC.  Prod.  iii. 
230;  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  71  ; B.  fasciculata,  Sieb.  in  Spreng.  Syst.  Cur.  Post. 
149;  Harmoyia  demifolia,  Schau.  in  Linnaea,  xvii.  238;  Babinytonia  demifolia, 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  74  ; Harmoyia  Baueriana,  Schau.  in  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  921, 
from  the  character  given. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 

The  structure  of  the  anthers  in  this  species  is  so  nearly  that  of  the  section  Oxymyrrhint 
(species  all  western)  that  I feel  doubts  as  to  having  correctly  placed  it  in  the  present 
one.  It  varies  much  in  the  size  of  the  flower,  the  length  of  the  pedicel,  and  attenuate  base 
of  the  calyx,  and  the  number  of  ovules.  Harmoyia  propinqua,  Schau.  in  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  921, 
has  smaller  flowers,  the  calyx-tube  almost  close  above  the  bracteoles,  and  the  connective-gland 
very  small  or  none.  Breckia  Nooo-anylica.  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  71,  or  Babinytonia  Novo-atiylica, 
F.  v.  M.  l.c.  74,  has  rather  larger  flowers,  the  calyx  attenuate  into  a pedicel  more  distinct  than 
in  H.  propinqua , shorter  than  in  the  conmv  n form,  the  connective-gland  small  or  none,  and 
ovules  more  numerous  than  usual ; the  stamens  also  vary  in  number  and  in  the  degree  of 
dehiscence  of  the  anther-cells  ; but  I find,  after  examining  a considerable  number  of  specimens, 
that  these  differences  pass  so  gradually  one  into  the  other  that  I am  unable  to  characterise  the 
several  forms  even  as  distinct  varieties. — Benth. 


9.  AGONIS,  DC. 

(Without  angles.) 

(Billiottia,  DC.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate  or  campanulate,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base,  the  free 
part  broad  ; lobes  5,  ovate,  usually  scarious,  imbricate  or  open.  Petals  5, 
orbicular,  spreading,  exceeding  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  free,  not  exceeding  the 
petals,  either  10  regularly  opposite  the  petals  and  calyx-lobes,  or  20  or  more 
without  any  opposite  the  centre  of  the  petals  ; filaments  filiform  ; anthers 
versatile,  the  cells  parallel,  opening  longitudinally;  connective  with  a small 
globular  gland.  Ovary  inferior,  3-celled,  with  2 or  4 ovules  in  each  cell  erect 
from  a small  nearly  basal  placenta;  style  filiform,  inserted  in  a deeply  tubular 
depression  in  the  centre  of  the  ovary,  being  attached  almost  to  the  base  of  the 
carpels ; stigma  capitate  or  peltate.  Capsule  opening  at  the  top  loculicidally  in 
3 valves,  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube.  Seeds  oblong  or  cuneate  ; testa  thin  ; 
embryo  straight  ; cotyledons  plano-convex,  much  longer  than  the  radicle. — 
Shrubs  or  small  trees.  Leaves  alternate,  often  crowded  on  the  smaller  branchlets, 
either  small  or  long  and  narrow,  entire.  Flowers  rather  small,  closely  sessile, 
in  globular  axillary  or  terminal  heads,  usually  surrounded  by  imbricate  scale-like 
bracts,  with  2 smaller  bracteoles  under  each  flower,  the  white  persistent  petals 
usually  very  conspicuous. 

Formerly  considered  as  a section  of  Leptospermum  on  account  of  its  alternate  leaves  and 
stamens  not  exceeding  the  petals ; it  is  much  nearer  allied  to  Melaleuca  in  inflorescence  and  in 
the  ovary  and  seeds,  whilst  the  arrangement  of  the  stamens  shows  a connection  with  Bteckia  and 
its  allies.  The  seeds  have  been  examined  in  a few  species  only.  — Bentli. 

Section  I.  Taxandria. — Stoutens  10,  reyularly  opposite  the  calyx-lobes  and  petals.  Ovules 
2 in  each  cell. 

Leaves  linear,  obtuse,  8 to  9 lines  long,  1 to  1£  line  broad 1.  A.  lysicephala. 

Section  II.  Ataxandria. — Stamens  20  to  30.  but  none  opposite  the  centre  of  the  petals. 
Ovules  4 to  6 in  each  cell. 

Leaves  oblong  or  ovate-lanceolate,  about  lin.  long,  3 to  5 lines  broad  . . 2.  A.  Srortechininna. 

1.  A.  lysicephala  (fruits  free  in  the  head),  F.  r.  M.  and  Bail.,  Occ.  Bap. 
Q.  FI.  No.  1 funder  Melaleuca).  Kennedy’s  Heath.  A dense  heath  like  shrub 
of  a few  feet,  the  upper  branchlets  hoary  and  almost  thread-like.  Leaves 
glabrous  and  faintly  3-nerved,  linear,  obtuse,  about  8 or  9 lines  long  and  1 to  H 
line  broad,  scattered  except  the  pair  close  under  each  head  of  flowers.  Fruiting- 


Li.  myrtacetE. 


587 


Ar/onis. ] 

heads  pubescent,  oval  or  globular,  from  very  small  to  6 lines  long  by  4 lines 
diameter,  usually  terminal  on  the  lower  slender  branchlets,  with  a pair  of  opposite 
leaves  close  under  each  head.  Fruiting-calyxes  pubescent,  easily  separated  from 
each  other,  being  nearly  encircled  by  subtending  scarious  bracts. 

Hab.:  Lloyd’s  Bay,  Thos.  A.  Gulliver. 

2.  A.  Scortechiniana  (after  Rev.  B.  Scortechini),  F.  v.  M.  Fraym.  xi. 
118.  A shrub  8 to  5ft.  high,  much  branched  ; branches  silky-pubescent. 
Leaves  oblong  or  ovate-lanceolate,  base  very  obtuse,  sessile,  faintly  5 to  7-nerved, 
about  lin.  long,  8 to  5 lines  broad,  concave,  copiously  dotted.  Flower  heads  at 
first  terminal,  then  axillary.  Outer  bracts  orbicular,  numerous,  imbricate,  silky, 
inner  ones  almost  ovate.  Calyx  silky-pubescent  outside,  lobes  about  1 line  long, 
membranous,  almost  semiovate.  Petals  white,  almost  2 lines  long,  round- 
obovate.  Stamens  20  to  30,  scarcely  1 line  long.  Anther  cells  opening  longitu- 
dinally, connective  gland  somewhat  large.  Style  very  short.  Stigma  peltate, 
slightly  3-sulcate.  Ovary  3-celled.  Fruit  campanulate-ovate,  scarcely  3 lines,  in 
heads  6 to  12  lines  but  not  connate.  Seeds  light  brown,  clavate  or  ellipsoid- 
linear,  about  § line  long. 

Hab.:  Around  the  swamps  on  Stvadbroke  Island. 


10.  LEPTOSPERMUM,  Forst. 

(Seeds  slender.) 

(Fabricia,  Gcertn.;  Macklottia,  Kortli.;  Homalospermum,  Schau.;  Periealymma,  Endl.) 

Calyx-tube  broadly  campanulate  or  rarely  turbinate,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at 
the  base,  free  part  broad  ; lobes  5,  ovate,  herbaceous  or  membranous,  imbricate 
or  open.  Petals  5,  orbicular,  spreading,  exceeding  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens 
numerous,  free,  not  exceeding  the  petals,  inserted  on  the  margin  of  the  disk  in  a 
single  row;  filaments  filiform;  anthers  versatile,  the  cells  parallel,  opening 
longitudinally  ; connective  with  a small  globular  gland.  Ovary  inferior  or  half- 
superior, enclosed  in  the  calyx-tube,  usually  5 or  more  celled,  rarely  3 or  4-celled, 
with  either  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell  densely  covering  a peltate  placenta  and 
horizontal  or  recurved,  or  few  and  recurved  in  two  rows  ; style  filiform,  inserted 
in  a slight  or  deep  depression  in  the  centre  of  the  ovary,  often  short,  with  a 
capitate  or  peltate  stigma.  Capsule  opening  at  the  top  loculicidally,  either 
protruding  from  the  calyx-tube  or  rarely  shorter.  Seeds  either  linear-cuneate 
and  wingless  or  more  or  less  angular  with  transparent  wings  or  cilia  along  the 
angles,  but  usually  only  few  in  each  cell  or  a single  one  perfect,  the  others  sterile 
often  hard  and  always  wingless. — Shrubs  or  rarely  small  trees,  glabrous  silky- 
pubescent  or  hoary.  Leaves  alternate,  small,  rigid,  entire,  nerveless  or  1 or 
3-nerved.  Flowers  usually  white,  sessile  or  rarely  shortly  pedicellate,  solitary  or 
2 or  3 together  at  the  ends  of  short  branchlets  or  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves. 
Bracts  broad,  scarious,  2 or  3 outer  ones  usually  imbricate,  but  falling  off  from 
the  very  young  bud,  2 inner  ones  or  bracteoles  opposite  and  close  under  the  calyx 
often  more  persistent. 

The  genus  is  common  to  Australia ' and  New  Zealand  and  the  Indian  Archipelago.  Of  the 
Australian  species  one  is  found  in  New  Zealand  also,  and  another  in  the  Indian  Archipelago,  the 
remainder  are  endemic.  The  species  are  very  difficult  to  distinguish.  The  whole  of  those  with 
5-celled  ovaries,  from  L.  lanigerum  to  L.  attenuation,  different,  as  some  of  them  appear  at  first 
sight,  pass  so  gradually  one  into  the  other  that  they  might  be  readily  admitted  as  varieties  of 
one  species,  whilst  on  the  other  hand  many  of  the  varieties  here  enumerated  have  been  distin- 
guished as  species  by  R.  Brown,  whose  herbarium  contains  a beautiful  series  of  well-selected 
specimens,  as  well  as  by  other  eminent  botanists  whose  opinions  are  entitled  to  great  weight. 
The  genus  requires,  therefore,  much  further  study  on  the  part  of  those  who  have  the  opportunity 
of  observing  it  in  its  native  stations.  From  the  dried  specimens,  whether  of  the  species  here 
admitted  or  of  the  varieties  or  races,  I have  been  unable  to  discover  any  positive  discriminating 
characters.  —Uenth. 


588 


LI.  MYRTACE^E. 


[Leptospennum. 


Most  authors  describe  the  calyx-lobes  of  Leptospennum  as  valvate  ; I have  always  found  them 
decidedly  imbricate  in  the  young  bud,  even  in  the  Javanese  specimens  communicated  by 
Blume. — Benth. 

Section  I.  Fabricia.  — Ovary  usually  0 to  10  or  i-celled.  Ovules  numerous.  Seeds  when 
perfect  rather  broad,  fringed  or  winged  at  the  angles  < as  far  as  knoim).  Flowers  closely  sessile. 

Ovary  usually  6 to  10-celled.  Calyx  villous.  Capsule  half-exserted  . . 1 . L.  Fabricia. 

Section  II.  Euleptospermum.  — Ovary  usually  5-celled,  or  here  and  there  4- celled , or 
S-celled  in  the  last  two  species.  Ovules  numerous.  Seeds,  both  perfect  and  sterile,  narrow -linear. 


Calyx-tube  glabrous.  Ovary  5 or  rarely  4-celled. 

Leaves  alternate,  lanceolate,  6 to  9 lines  long,  2 to  2£  lines  broad ; 
midrib  and  marginal  nerves  prominent,  apex  slightly  recurved  ; base 

decurrent,  forming  angles  on  the  branchlets 2.  L.  wooroonooran. 

Leaves  flat  or  with  recurved  margins,  obtuse  or  scarcely  pointed  (except 

in  the  large  variety) 3.  L.jlavescens. 

Leaves  flat  or  concave,  pungent-pointed,  narrow  or  small 4.  L.  scoparium. 


Calyx-tube  pubescent  or  villous.  Ovary  5 rarely  4-celled. 

Branches  not  spinescent.  Flowers  sessile  or  nearly  so. 

Calyx  broad  and  obtuse  at  the  base,  woolly,  loosely  villous,  or  closely 
tomentose. 


Leaves  linear,  concave,  pungent-pointed 5.  L.  arachnoideum. 

Leaves  obovate,  oblong  or  elliptical,  flat  or  with  recurved  margins, 

obtuse  or  shortly  mucronate 6.  L.  lanigerum. 

Calyx  usually  attenuate  at  the  base,  at  least  when  young,  silky  with 
appressed  hairs. 

Calyx-lobes  appressed-silky,  usually  persistent 7 . L.  stellatum. 

Calyx-lobes  membranous,  deciduous.  Erect  or  spreading  shrubs  . 9.  L.  myrtifolium. 

Branches  not  spinescent.  Flowers  pedicellate.  Calyx  silky,  usually 

attenuate  at  the  base.  Capsule  not  prominent 8.  L.  attenuatum. 

Ovary  3-celled. 

Leaves  linear-lanceolate,  minutely  silky.  Flowers  small,  glabrous. 

Capsule  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube 10.  L.  abnorme. 

Leaves  oblong-lanceolate,  glabrous.  Fruit  terminal,  in  clusters  of  3 or 

4,  or  in  very  short  racemes 11.  L.  Luehmanni. 


Dr.  Lauterer  considers  that  the  young  shoots  and  leaves  of  all  the  species  of  this  genus  are  of 
the  same  service  to  the  urinary  organs,  and  against  gravel,  as  those  of  the  Uva  ursi. 

1.  I>.  Fabricia  (after  Fabricius,  a Swedish  entomologist),  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  102.  A shrub  or  tree,  the  branches  often  loosely  hairy.  Leaves  from 
oblong-lanceolate  to  almost  obovate,  f to  liin.  long,  obtuse  or  slightly  mucro- 
nate, 3 or  5-nerved.  Flowers  mostly  terminating  short  leafy  branchlets,  surrounded 
by  orbicular  imbricate  deciduous  bracts.  Calyx  more  or  less  tomentose-villous,  the 
tube  hemispherical,  the  lobes  nearly  as  long  as  the  tube,  orbicular,  very  obtuse, 
silky  or  villous  outside.  Stamens  numerous.  Ovary  usually  10-celled.  Capsule 
very  prominent  above  the  calyx-rim,  the  free  part  usually  as  long  as  the  enclosed 
portion.  Seeds  not  seen  quite  perfect,  but  in  the  apparently  ripe  capsules  already 
burst  open  the  enlarged  ovules  of  each  cell  are  readily  detached  in  a mass  with 
the  placenta,  the  whole  assuming  the  shape  represented  by  Gsertner  as  that  of  the 
seed  ; enlarged  ovules  or  young  seeds  very  flat,  obliquely  obovate-oblong,  the 
upper  ones  falcate,  not  winged  or  very  slightly  so  at  the  base. — Fabricia  murtifolia, 
Gfertn.  Fruct.  i.  175  t.  85. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  Kiver,  Banks  and  Solander ; Haggerstone  and  Lizard  Islands,  A.  Cunning- 
ham ; Cape  York,  If'.  Hill. 

The  Banksian  specimens  described  by  Gartner  are  in  the  same  state,  with  unripe  seeds  only, 
as  A.  Cunningham’s. — Benth. 

2.  I.,  wooroonooran  (aboriginal  name  for  Bellenden  Ker),  Bail,  ‘did  Suppl. 
Syn.  Ql.  FI.  27,  and  Bot.  Bull.  v.  Trunk  often  extending  in  an  almost 
horizontal  position  for  several  yards  at  from  3 to  6ft.  above  the  ground,  2 or  3ft. 
diameter,  with  a thick  stringy  bark,  from  which  branches  arise  to  20  or  30ft., 
thus  forming  a large  spreading-headed  tree  of  dense  foliage.  This  peculiar 
growth  is  due  probably  to  the  high  winds  which  blow  at  certain  seasons  of  the 


Leptospermum.] 


li.  myrtacej:. 


589 


year.  Leaves  alternate,  lanceolate,  £ to  fin.  long,  2 to  2b  lines  broad  in  the 
centre,  midrib  and  a marginal  nerve  on  each  side  prominent,  oil-dots  numerous, 
with  blunt,  glandular,  slightly  recurved  apex,  base  decurrent  forming  angles  on 
the  branchlets,  slightly  silky  when  young,  as  are  also  the  young  shoots.  Flowers 
few  or  solitary,  terminating  the  branchlets.  Calyx  muricate,  tube  turbinate  ; 
lobes  bluntly  triangular,  the  upper  part  bearing  a dense,  woolly  pubescence. 
Petals  about  8 lines  long,  or  twice  as  long  as  calyx-lobes,  rotund,  ovate  and 
veined.  Capsules  solitary  or  2 together  at  the  ends  of  the  short  branchlets. 
Calyx-tube  glabrous,  5-ribbed,  corresponding  with  the  5 cells,  nearly  sessile, 
slightly  over  2 lines  diameter ; the  capsule  prominent  above  the  calyx-tube. 

Hab.:  South  Peak,  Bellender  Ker  ( Kxped.  1889  and  A.  Mestoii  1892),  and  so  far  as  at  present 
known  only  found  there. 

The  wood  is  strong,  heavy,  and  of  a reddish  colour. 

3.  Z>.  flavescens  (yellowish),  Sjn.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  262  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  104.  “Tantoon,”  Bundaberg,  Keys.  Usually  a tall  shrub,  quite 
glabrous  or  the  young  parts  minutely  silky-hoary.  Leaves  from  narrow-oblong 
or  linear-lanceolate  to  broadly  oblong  or  even  obovate,  obtuse  or  scarcely  acute, 
rigid,  flat,  nerveless  or  1 or  3-nerved,  attaining  fin.  in  the  largest  forms  but 
usually  under  iin.  and  sometimes  all  very  small.  Flowers  solitary,'  terminating 
the  branchlets  or  axillary  and  nearly  sessile,  as  variable  in  size  as  in  L.  laniyerum, 
and  of  the  same  shape.  Calyx  quite  glabrous,  the  tube  broadly  campanulate  or 
hemispherical ; lobes  ovate,  as  long  as  the  tube,  membranous  or  thickened  in  the 
centre.  Ovary  5-celled,  more  or  less  convex  on  the  top,  with  a short  central 
depression  round  the  style.  Capsule  prominent  above  the  calyx-tube.  Seeds  all 
narrow-linear,  without  wings. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  227 ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  139  ; 
Melaleuca  trinervia,  White,  Trav.  229  t.  24  ? ; Leptospermum  polyyali folium,  Salisb. 
Prod.  350;  L.  Thea,  Willd.  Spec.  PI.  ii.  949,  and  (on  his  authority)  Melaleuca 
Tliea,  Wendl.  Sert.  Hannov.  24  t.  13  ; L.  tuberculatum,  Poir.  Diet.  Suppl.  iii.  338 
(from  the  character  given). 

Hab.:  Abundant  about  Brisbane  River  and  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  v.  Mueller  and 
others;  Percy  Island,  A.  Cunningham  ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan. 

Wood  light-coloured,  close-grained  and  tough. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  165a. 

This  species,  which  extends  also  into  the  Indian  Archipelago  and  Malacca,  is  scarcely  to  be 
distinguished  from  L.  laniyerum  except  by  the  absence  of  all  hairs  or  down  from  the  calyx,  and 
is  equally  variable,  the  extreme  forms  being  at  first  sight  so  dissimilar  that  it  requires  the 
examination  of  a large  number  of  specimens  to  believe  in  their  specific  identity,  and  at  the  same 
time  it  is  almost  impossible  to  draw  a precise  line  of  demarcation  between  this  and  several  others. 
The  following  are  the  varieties  which  appear  to  be  the  most  prominent  and  distinct. — Benth. 

a.  commune.  Leaves  narrow,  from  under  Jin.  to  fin.  long.  Flowers  middle-sized. — Bot. 
Mag.  t.  2695;  L.  porophyllum,  Cav.  Ic.  iv.  17.  t.  330  f.  2 (from  the  fig.  and  descr.) ; L. 
amboinense,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  229,  at  least  the  specimens  so  named  by  Miquel  and  Blume  ; Macklottiu 
amboinensis,  Korth.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  i.  196. — Also  in  the  Indian  Archipelago. 

b.  obovatum,  F.  v.  M.  Leaves  from  broadly  obovate  to  obovate-oblong,  under  Jin.  loug. — L. 
obovatum,  Sweet,  FI.  Austr.  t.  36  ; L.  micromyrtus,  Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  145  (from 
the  character  given). — L.  emarginatum , Wendl.  in  Spreng.  Syst.  ii.  491,  has  the  leaves  narrow 
as  in  a,  but  very  obtuse  or  emarginateas  in  b.  Specimens  of  this  variety  received  from  Burrum 
River  (J.  Keys ) had  a strong  citron  odour. 

c.  grandifiorum.  Leaves  rather  large.  Flowers  larger  than  in  any  other  variety. — L.  grandi- 
dorum.  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  514:  L.  virgatum , Schau.  in  Linneea,  xv.  410;  L.  nobite,  F.  v.  M.; 
Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  145. 

d.  microphyllum.  Leaves  flat,  oblong  or  lanceolate,  J to  Jin.  long. 

e.  minutifolium,  F.  v.  M.  Leaves  all  under  Jin.  and  mostly  under  2 lines  long,  obovate  or 
oblong,  concave  and  recurved.  Flowers  very  small.  This  may  prove  sufficiently  distinct  to  be 
considered  as  a species. 

All  the  forms  in  FI.  Austr.  are  given,  as  our  plant  varies  so  much  that  all  may  be  met  with. 

4.  L.  scoparium  (broom-like),  Foist,  t 'har.  Ben.  48  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
105.  A rigid  very  much  branched  shrub,  in  alpine  situations  low  and  almost 
prostrate,  more  usually  erect,  and  attaining  sometimes  10  to  12ft.,  the  young 
shoots  often  silky,  the  adult  foliage  mostly  glabrous.  Leaves  from  ovate  to 


590 


LI.  MYRTACE.E. 


Leptospermum. 


linear-lanceolate  or  linear,  rigid,  concave,  acute  and  pungent-pointed,  mostly 
under  4in.  long.  Flowers  axillary,  sessile  and  solitary,  or  rarely  terminating 
short  lateral  branchlets.  Calyx  quite  glabrous,  as  variable  in  size  as  in 
L.  jiavescens,  and  the  flowers  and  fruit  otherwise  precisely  as  in  that  species.— 
Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  262;  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  622  ; DC.  Prod.  iii.  227  ; 
Bot.  Mag.  t.  3419;  Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  138;  Schau.  in  Linnaea,  xv.  424  ; 
L.  Jforibundum,  Salisb.  Prod.  349,  and  L.  recurci  folium,  Salisb.  l.c.  350  (from  the 
characters  given)  ; L.  juniper  if oliuni  (with  narrow  leaves),  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn. 
Soc.  iii.  263  ; Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  89;  Schau.  in  Linnaea,  xv.  431  ; L.  multi - 
ftorum,  Cav.  Ic.  PI.  iv.  17  t.  331  f.  1 ; L.  juniper  if olium , Cav.  l.c.  18  t.  331  f.  2 ; 
L.  squarrosum,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.;  L.  rubrieaule,  Link,  Enum.  Hort.  Berol.  ii.  25  ; 
L.  sti/phelioides,  Schau.  in  Linmea,  xv.  423 ; aciculare,  Schau.  l.c.  429 ; 
L.  oxycedrus,  Schau.  l.c.  432;  L.  baccativm,  Schau.  l.c.  433,  not  of  Sm.  including 
according  to  Schau.  L.  persiciflorum , Reichb.  Hort.  Bot.  iii.  8 t.  220;  L.  divari- 
catum,  Schau.  in  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  923  (a  starved  small-leaved  form). 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay  and  many  other  localities. 

The  species  is  also  in  New  Zealand. 

5.  Z>.  arachnoideum  (cobw'ebby),  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Sm-.  iii.  263  ; Bent. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  105.  A rigid  much-branched  shrub,  with  the  habit  of  the  narrow- 
leaved forms  of  L.  scuparium , and  the  same  pungent  crowded  rigid  concave  linear 
leaves,  hut  wuth  the  flowers  of  L.  laniyerum,  mostly  on  short  lateral  leafy 
branches,  closely  surrounded  by  floral  leaves.  Calyx  broad,  rather  large,  loosely 
woolly-hairy.  Capsule  shortly  protruding  from  the  calyx-tube,  5-celled  or  very 
rarely  3 or  4-celled. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  228 ; L.  aracbioides,  Gtertn.  Fruct.  i.  175 
t.  35  ; L.  triloculare,  Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  88;  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  791. 

Hab.:  Stanthorpe  (normal  form). 

baccatnm,  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  264.  is  a form  with  much  less  woolly  calyxes, 
almost  connecting  this  species  with  L scopariinn.  Some  specimens  from  C.  Moore  are  quite  like 
the  one  in  Smith’s  herbarium. — Benth. 

6.  L.  lanigerum  (wroolly),  Sm.  in  irons.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  263 ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  106.  A tall  erect  shrub,  sometimes  growing  into  a small  tree,  rarely 
low  and  bushy,  the  branchlets  usually  softly  pubescent.  Leaves  from  obovate- 
oblong  to  elliptical  or  narrow-oblong,  exceedingly  variable  in  size  and  indumentum, 
in  some  luxuriant  specimens  attaining  fin.  or  even  more,  but  naturally  not 
above  Hu.  and  in  some  varieties  all  very  much  smaller,  obtuse  or  mucronate- 
acute,  more  or  less  hoary  silky  or  hairy  underneath  or  on  both  sides,  rarely 
glabrous  except  a few  silky  hairs  on  the  margin,  when  broad  and  thin  showing 
1,  3 or  5 nerves,  more  frequently  rigidly  coriaceous,  the  nerves  scarcely  prominent 
or  concealed  by  the  indumentum.  Flowers  solitary,  terminating  very  short  leafy 
branchlets,  or  rarely  sessile  on  the  branches  without  intervening  leaves.  Calyx 
broad,  more  or  less  densely  clothed  with  silky  or  w'oolly  hairs  ; lobes  triangular, 
often  as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  twice  as  long,  broad,  distinctly  clawed. 
Stamens  about  20  to  30,  in  a single  series.  Ovary  5-celled,  convex,  with  a 
central  depression,  tvith  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell.  Capsule  nearly  globular 
but  depressed  at  the  top,  more  or  less  protruding  from  the  calyx-tube,  the  lobes 
wearing  off,  varying  from  under  3 to  above  4 lines  diameter.  Seeds  linear 
without  wings  ; cotyledons  as  long  as  or  rather  longer  than  the  radicle. — 
DC.  Prod.  iii.  227  ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  139  ; L.  australe,  Salis.  Prod.  350  ; 
Melaleuca  trinervia,  White  Journ.  229  t.  24  (quoted  by  Smith  and  DC.  as 
L.  trincrre),  is  either  this  or  L.  favescens. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 

This  exceedingly  variable  species  has  the  calyx  sometimes  nearly  glabrous,  and  then  passes 
almost  into  L.jlavcscens. — Benth. 


Leptospermumf\ 


LI.  MYRTACE/E. 


591 


7.  L.  stellatum  (star-like),  Car.  1c.  iv.  10  t.  390.  f.  1 (from  the  tiyure  ami 
description ) ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  107.  Much-branched  and  erect,  from  2 or  3 
to  several  feet  high,  the  young  shoots  silky-pubescent,  the  adult  foliage  glabrous 
or  nearly  so.  Leaves  from  rather  broadly  elliptical-oblong  to  oblong-linear  or 
linear-lanceolate,  mostly  from  J to  Jin.  long,  obtuse  or  mucronate-acute,  rather 
rigid,  more  or  less  conspicuously  1 or  3-nerved.  Flowers  rather  small,  sessile  or 
very  shortly  pedicellate  in  the  upper  axils  or  terminating  short  leafy  shoots  and 
then  often  two  together.  Calyx-tube  broadly  turbinate,  densely  silky-pubescent  ; 
lobes  silky,  more  acute  and  more  persistent  than  in  L.  myrtifolium . Ovary  flat- 
topped  or  concave.  Capsule  level  with  the  margin  of  the  calyx  or  scarcely 
protruding. — L.  sericatum,  Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  298. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Island,  M'Gillivray ; Logan  River,  Fraser;  near  Lake  Salvator,  Mitchell: 
Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy  (specimens  in  fruit  only,  and  doubtful ; capsules  very  small). 

Var.  grandijtomm.  Flowers  larger,  the  calyx-tube  fully  2 lines  long. — L.  yniduefolium  of 
German  gardens,  but  scarcely  of  DC.  Queensland,  Bowman. 

8.  I.,  attenuatum  (leaves  attenuated),  Sin.  in  Trans.  I Ann.  Sue.  iii.  262  ; 

Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  108.  “ Booah,”  Bundaberg,  Keys.  Very  near  L.  stellatum, 

differing  only  in  the  pedicellate  flowers.  Branches  usually  slender  and  loose. 
Leaves  mostly  narrow-oblong  and  about  Jin.  long,  but  varying  from  broadly 
oblong  and  Jin.  to  linear  and  above  lin.  long.  Flowers  usually  small,  solitary 
in  the  axils  or  2 together  on  short  leafy  branchlets,  on  pedicels  of  1 to  2 lines. 
Calyx-tube  densely  silky-pubescent,  contracted  at  the  base,  lobes  usually 
persistent.  Capsule  scarcely  prominent  above  the  calyx-rim. — L.  pendulum, 
Sieb.  PI.  Exs.;  L.  yniduefolium,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  228?;  L.  breripes,  F.  v.  M.  in 
Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  1855,  125. 

Hab.:  Northumberland  Islands,  R.  Brown  (with  small  leaves  and  dowers) ; ranges  near  1’eak 
Downs,  F.  v.  Mueller  (with  long  narrow  leaves). 

9.  I>.  myrtifolium  (myrtle-leaved),  Sieb.  in  DU.  Trod.  iii.  238  ; Bentli.  FI. 

Austr.  iii.  108.  A tall  shrub  attaining  8 to  10ft.  but  flowering  when  only  1 to 
2ft.  high,  the  branches  usually  more  slender  than  in  /..  laniyerum,  glabrous  or 
silky.  Leaves  usually  small  and  rarely  Jin.  long,  obovate  or  oblong,  flat  or 
concave,  nerveless  or  1 or  3-nerved,  glabrous  or  silky-white.  Flowers  rather 

small,  all  or  nearly  all  solitary,  sessile  and  axillary.  Bracts  none  or  already 
fallen  from  the  very  young  bud.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  silky  with  appressed 
hairs,  rarely  above  2 lines  diameter,  lobes  shorter  than  the  tube,  glabrous  or 
slightly  silky,  membranous  and  much  more  deciduous  than  in  L.  laniyerum. 
Ovary  flat-topped  or  concave,  with  a central  depression  round  the  style,  5-celled. 
Capsule  flat-topped,  on  a level  with  or  scarcely  protruding  from  the  calyx-rim. — 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  140;  Kriostemon ! trinerre,  Hook.  .Journ.  Bot.  i.  254; 
7,.  multicaule,  A.  Cunn.  in  Field,  N.S.  Wales,  349  ; Schau.  in  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  923. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Island,  M'Gillivray  (like  a var.  of  L.  laniyerum  from  the  same  place,  but  with 
the  calyx  of  L.  myrtifolium j ; Rockhampton,  Thozet  (leaves  narrow  and  glabrous). 

Wood  close-grained,  tough,  and  dark-coloured. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  166b. 

10.  I..  abnorme  (differing  from  ordinary  species),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Bentli. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  109.  A tall  shrub  with  rather  slender  virgate  branches,  glabrous 
or  the  young  shoots  minutely  silky.  Leaves  linear-lanceolate,  acute  or 
mucronate,  mostly  1 to  2in.  long,  prominently  1-nerved,  with  1 or  2 faint  lateral 
nerves  on  each  side.  Flowers  nearly  sessile,  rather  small,  axillary  or  several 
together  in  a compact  sessile  terminal  corymbose  raceme.  Bracts  very  deciduous. 
Calyx-tube  turbinate,  glabrous,  nearly  14  line  long;  lobes  ovate-triangular, 
persistent,  with  petal-like  margins.  Petals  about  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes, 
less  contracted  at  the  base  than  in  most  Leptospermums.  Stamens  about  25, 


592 


Li.  MYRTACE/E. 


[Leptospennum. 


crowded  opposite  the  sepals,  solitary  opposite  the  petals.  Ovary  3-celled,  slightly 
convex,  with  a deep  central  depression  ; ovules  numerous.  Capsule  convex,  but 
shorter  than  the  calyx-tube. — Kunzea  brachyandra,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  27. 

Hab.:  Northumberland  Island,  It.  Brown ; Duck  Creek,  Vallachy.  (Leaves  in  both  only  about 
Jin..  and  the  specimens  in  fruit  only,  and  therefore  doubtful).  Stanthorpe. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  hard,  heavy,  and  close-grained.- — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  16(ic. 

Yield  of  oil  from  dry  foliage,  8oz.  per  ewt. — J.  F.  Bailey. 

11.  I«.  Luehmanni  (after  J.  G.  Luehmann,  F.L.S.),  Bail.  A dwarf 
glabrous  tree,  with  a smooth  reddish-brown  bark  which  is  shed  in  long  thin  strips; 
branchlets  slender,  reddish,  terete.  Leaves  oblong-lanceolate,  1 to  liin.  long,  3 
to  4 lines  broad,  obtuse  or  with  a small  glandular  point,  base  cuneate,  nearly 
sessile,  both  surfaces  glossy,  coriaceous,  longitudinal  nerves  5,  the  inner  ones 
branching  and  distantly  anastomosing  ; the  oil  glands  prominent  dotting  both 
sides.  Flowers  not  obtained.  Fruiting  calyxes  3 or  4 together  at  the  ends  of 
the  branches  in  heads  or  short  racemes,  turbinate  glossy,  about  2 lines  diameter, 
3-celled,  capsule  scarcely  sunk,  the  valves  protruding.  Seeds  curved,  linear- 
angular. 

Hub.:  This  species  is  only  known  from  a few  trees  growing  upon  the  summit  of  one  of  the 
Glasshouse  Mountains.  Differs  from  L.  abnorme,  F.  v.  M.,  in  its  broader  thicker  leaves, 
branchlets  terete  not  angular,  and  even  more  in  its  bark  and  fruit. 


11.  KUNZEA,  Reichb. 

(After  Gustav  Kunze.) 

(Salisia,  Lindl.;  Pentagonaster,  Klotzsch.) 

Calyx-tube  ovoid  or  globular,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base,  the  free  part 
rarely  dilated  ; lobes  5,  small,  imbricate  or  open,  usually  erect,  green  or  scarious 
at  the  edges  only.  Petals  5,  small,  orbicular,  spreading.  Stamens  longer  than 
the  petals,  indefinite,  free,  in  one  or  several  series  ; filaments  filiform  ; anthers 
small,  versatile  ; cells  parallel,  opening  in  longitudinal  slits,  the  connective  with 
a small  globular  gland.  Ovary  2 to  5-celled,  usually  glabrous  on  the  top,  with  2 
or  more  frequently  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell,  horizontal  or  pendulous  from  a 
more  or  less  peltate  placenta ; style  filiform,  inserted  in  a slight  central  depres- 
sion of  the  ovary  ; stigma  small  or  capitate.  Capsule  wholly  inferior,  not  woody, 
and  in  one  species  fleshy,  crowned  by  the  persistent  scarcely  hardened  free  portion 
of  the  calyx,  opening  at  the  top  loculicidally.  Seeds  pendulous,  oblong  or 
obovoid  ; testa  thin  or  firm  ; embryo  straight ; cotyledons  plano-convex,  longer 
than  the  superior  radicle. — Shrubs,  often  heath-like.  Leaves  alternate  or  very 
rarely  here  and  there  opposite,  small,  entire.  Flowers  sessile  or  rarely  pedicellate 
in  the  upper  axils,  or  more  frequently  in  terminal  heads,  rarely  an  oblong  spike 
below  the  end  of  the  branch,  with  a broad  scale-like  bract,  and  2 smaller  brac- 
teoles  under  each  flower,  and  sometimes  several  empty  bracts  imbricate  round  the 
head. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  Formerly  included  in  Metrosideros,  it  differs  in  habit, 
inflorescence,  and  structure  of  the  ovary,  much  nearer  allied  to  Leptospermum,  but  readily 
distinguished  by  the  exserted  stamens. — Benth. 

Ovary  3-celled  or  rarely  2 or  4-celled.  Flowers  axillary  or  in  loose  or  ovoid 
heads.  Bracts  lanceolate  or  none. 

Leaves  imbricate,  linear-semiterete,  2 to  3J  lines  long.  Flowers  terminal, 

globose  or  ovoid  heads 1.  A',  calida. 

Leaves  linear  or  linear-lanceolate,  \ to  Jin.  or  more.  Flowers  pedicellate  2.  K.  peduncularis. 

1.  K.  calida  (of  warm  parts),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  vi.  23.  Branches  clothed 
with  an  appressed  hoary-villous  pubescence.  Leaves  imbricate,  linear-semiterete, 
about  from  2 to  3J  lines  long,  J to  § line  broad,  channelled  above,  obtuse,  more 
or  less  silky-pubescent.  Flower-heads  terminal,  globose  to  ovate.  Bracts  lanceo- 


LI.  MYRTACEzE. 


598 


Kunzea. ] 

late  or  linear- cymbiform,  as  long  as  the  calyx. ; bracteoles  canaliculate-linear, 
silky.  Calyx  about  8 lines  long,  silky-villous  outside,  teeth  deltoid,  acuminate. 
Petals  purplish,  rotund,  1 line  long.  Stamens  50  to  60,  purplish.  Anthers 
minute,  yellow,  almost  globular,  dorsifixed.  Style  about  3 lines  long,  glabrous, 
purple.  Ovary  purple,  3-celled  ; ovules  numerous.  Stigma  small,  depressed. 

Hab.:  Flinders  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

2.  K..  peduncularis  (pedunculate),  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  1855,  124, 
and  in  Hook.  Kew  Journ.  viii.  67  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  115.  A tall  shrub  or 
sometimes  a small  tree,  the  branchlets  virgate,  glabrous  or  very  slightly  silky 
when  young.  Leaves  linear  or  linear-lanceolate,  concave,  acute,  mostly  about 
Jin.,  but  varying  from  J to  nearly  lin.  long.  Flowers  small,  shortly  pedicellate, 
in  the  upper  axils,  forming  either  short  terminal  leafy  corymbs  or  long  inter- 
rupted leafy  racemes.  Bracteoles  scarious,  but  falling  off  from  the  very  young- 
bud.  Calyx  glabrous,  about  1J  line  long;  lobes  ovate,  with  scarious  margins. 
Petals  obovate,  not  exceeding  1 line.  Stamens  above  30,  in  a single  series,  from 
half  as  long  again  to  twice  as  long  as  the  petals.  Ovary  about  half  as  long  as  the 
calyx-tube,  3-celled  or  very  rarely  4-celled,  with  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell  on 
a peltate  placenta.  Fruiting-calyx  slightly  enlarged.  Seeds  usually  only  one 
perfect  in  each  cell. — Boeckea  phylicoid.es,  A.  Cunn.;  Schau.  in  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  921  ; 
Kunzea  leptospernwides,  F.  v.  M.;  Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  146. 

Hab.:  Queensland  (without  locality).  F.  v.  Mueller. 


12.  CALLISTEMON,  R.  Br. 

(Referring  to  the  beautiful  often  red  stamens.) 

Calyx-tube  ovoid,  campanulate  or  urceolate,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base, 
the  free  part  erect  or  contracted ; lobes  5,  imbricate,  more  or  less  scarious, 
deciduous.  Petals  5,  orbicular,  spreading,  longer  than  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens 
much  longer  than  the  petals,  indefinite,  usually  in  several  series,  free  or  very 
rarely  collected  in  clusters  or  very  shortly  united  opposite  the  petals,  or  all  very 
shortly  united  in  a continuous  ring  ; anthers  versatile,  the  cells  parallel,  opening 
longitudinally.  Ovary  villous  on  the  top,  usually  convex,  with  a slight  depression 
round  the  style,  3 or  4-celled,  with  very  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell,  horizontal 
or  ascending  and  covering  a peltate  placenta  ; style  filiform  with  a small  terminal 
often  scarcely  conspicuous  stigma.  Fruiting-calyx  more  or  less  hardened  and 
enlarged,  with  a truncate  orifice ; capsule  enclosed  in  and  more  or  less  adnate  to 
the  calyx,  opening  loculicidally.  Seeds  linear  or  linear-cuneate,  testa  thin  ; 
cotyledons  plano-convex,  longer  than  the  radicle. — Tall  shrubs  or  small  trees. 
Leaves  scattered,  terete,  linear  or  lanceolate,  entire,  coriaceous,  nerveless  or  -with 
a prominent  midrib  and  nerve-like  margins  and  pinnate  veins.  Flowers  showy, 
pale  yellow  or  crimson,  in  dense  oblong  or  cylindrical  spikes,  at  first  terminal, 
but  the  axis  very  soon  growing  out  into  a leafy  shoot,  the  lower  leaves  of  the  new 
shoot  usually  reduced  to  dry  very  deciduous  scales,  each  flower  closely  sessile  or 
slightly  immersed  in  the  woody  rhachis.  Bracts  none  or  dry  and  deciduou^, 
rarely  here  and  there  more  persistent  and  leaf-like.  Stamens  in  most  species  J 
to  lin.  long  or  even  more. 

The  genus  is  confined  to  Australia.  As  originally  observed  by  R.  Brown,  it  passes  gradually 
into  Melaleuca , with  which  F.  v.  Mueller  proposes  to  reunite  it,  the  C.  speciosus  being,  as  it 
were,  intermediate  between  the  two.  On  the  other  hand,  it  is  as  closely  connected  with  Kunzea 
through  K.  Baxteri  (of  W.  Aust.),  and  that  genus  again  passes  into  Leptospermum.  Yet  the 
great  majority  of  species  of  each  of  the  four  groups  are  separated  by  characters  so  marked  and 
prominent  that  it  appears  more  convenient  to  retain  the  four  genera  as  generally  admitted. — Benth. 

The  species  of  Callutemon,  as  thus  limited,  have  a remarkable  similarity  in  their  floral 
characters,  scarcely  differing  but  in  the  breadth  and  consistence  of  their  leaves  and  in  the 
length  and  colour  of  the  stamens.  They  might,  indeed,  almost  be  considered  as  varieties  of 
one  species. — Benth. 


594 


LI.  MYRTACE&. 


[Callistenwn. 


Leaves  lanceolate. 

Stamens  red. 

Leaves  thick,  penniveined,  very  prominent.  Mower-spikes  dense,  large, 

usually  villous.  Stamens  obscurely  or  very  shortly  o-adelphous  . . 1.  C.  speciosus. 

Leaves  usually  penniveined.  not  always  very  prominent.  Spikes  glabrous 
or  pubescent 

Spikes  rather  loose.  Anthers  dark  coloured 2.  C.  lanceolatux. 

Spikes  short  dense.  Anthers  usually  yellow 3.6'.  coccineus. 

Stamens  greenish-yellow.  Spikes  usually  glabrous 4.  C.  salignus. 

Leaves  pine-like.  Spikes  about  lin.  long.  Stamens  white  or  yellowish  . . 5.  C.  pityoides. 


1.  C.  speciosus  (beautiful),  DC.  Prod.  iii.  224  ; Benth.  FI.  Amtr.  iii.  119. 
A tall  bushy  shrub  or  small  tree,  glabrous  except  the  inflorescence,  or  the  young 
shoots  silky-hairy.  Leaves  narrow-lanceolate,  obtuse  with  a callous  point, 
narrowed  at  the  base,  mostly  8 to  4in.  long,  penniveined,  with  a prominent 
midrib  and  nerve-like  margins  as  in  <\  lanceolatux,  but  much  thicker  and  more 
rigid.  Flowers  large,  of  a rich  red,  in  dense  cylindrical  spikes  of  8 to  5 or  even 
Gin.,  the  rhachis  and  calyx  usually  pubescent  or  hirsute.  Calyx-tube  often  8 
lines  long  ; lobes  1 to  14  line  diameter.  Petals  2 to  3 lines.  Stamens  usually 
about  lin.  long,  of  a rich  red,  more  or  less  distinctly  collected  in  clusters  or  very 
shortly  united  in  bundles  opposite  the  petals.  Fruiting-calyx  globular,  about 
8 lines  diameter,  with  a broad  open  truncate  orifice.  Capsule  usually  consider- 
ably shorter. — Sehau.  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  122  ; Metroxidernx  xgecioxa,  Sims,  Bot. 
Mag.  t.  1701  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  285;  Metroxiderox  glauca,  Bonpl.  Jard.  Malm. 
86.  t.  84  ; Callixteinon  glaucux,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  14  ; Melaleuca  pallidum,  R.  Br. 
in  Ait.  Holt.  Kew  ed.  2.  iv.  410;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  212,  not  of  Schlecht. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Island,  l)r.  .Joseph  Bancroft;  Maroochie.  J.  I.oic  and  many  others;  Mac- 
pherson’s  Range,  II.  Schneider  and  H.  Tryon. 

The  Queensland  plants  here  placed  under  this  species  have  usually  been  referred  to  C. 
lanceolatux,  DC.  I consider  from  their  very  different  habit  alone  they  cannot  be  considered  as 
forms  of  that  species,  and  must  either  be  considered  forms  of  C.  speciosus,  DC.,  or  as  an 
additional  species.  In  the  Moreton  Bay  specimens,  the  rhachis  is  glabrous ; of  those  from  the 
North  Coast  Railway  Line  and  Macpherson  Range,  the  rhachis  is  hairy,  and  the  leaves  more 
prominently  punctate.  The  plants  have  an  erect  growth  seldom  over  3 or  4ft.  high,  with  some- 
times a few  erect  branches,  and  are  never  found  out  of  swamps. 

2.  C.  lanceolatus  (lance-like),  DC.  Prod.  iii.  228;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 

120.  “ Marum,”  Nerang,  Schneider.  Usually  a tall  shrub,  but  some- 

times low  and  bushy  and  at  others  attaining  30ft.,  the  young  shoots 
silky  or  loosely  hairy  and  the  inflorescence  usually  pubescent,  other- 
wise glabrous.  Leaves  lanceolate,  variable  in  breadth,  usually  acute 
and  l.j  to  2in.  long  but  varying  from  1 to  3in.,  rather  rigid,  more  or 
less  penniveined,  the  margins  often  nerve-like.  Flower-spikes  2 to  lin.  long, 
not  very  dense,  the  rhachis  and  calyxes  pubescent  hirsute  or  rarely  glabrous  ; 
occasionally,  especially  in  cultivation,  the  flowers  are  more  distant  and  a few  of 
them  in  the  axils  of  leaf-like  bracts.  Calyx-tube  usually  about  2 lines  long  ; 
lobes  broad  and  very  obtuse.  Petals  greenish  or  reddish,  from  14  to  nearly  3 
lines  diameter.  Stamens  red,  in  some  specimens  deeply  coloured  and  lin.  long, 
in  others  much  paler,  more  slender  and  scarcely  above  -|in.,  quite  free  or  very 
shortly  united  in  a ring  at  the  base.  Fruiting-calyx  not  much  enlarged,  the 
truncate  orifice  usually  open.— -F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  58;  Metrosiderox  lanceolata, 
Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  272  ; M.  citrina,  Curt.  Bot.  Mag.  t.  260 ; M. 
lophantha,  Vent.  Jard.  Cels.  t.  69  ; M.  marginata,  Cav.  Ic.  iv.  18.  t.  332  ; 
C’allistemon  marginatus,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  224  ; C.  xcaber,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1288  ; 
M.  nigulosa,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.  n.  321,  but  perhaps  not  of  Willd.;  M.  xemperflorens, 
Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  523. 

Hab  : Shoalwater  Bay,  R.  Brown;  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay.  Fraser.  II'.  Hill,  and  others  ; 
Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Bowen  River.  Bowman  ; Edgecombe  Bay,  DaHacky  : Condamine 


Callistemon.] 


li.  myrtacejl 


595 


River  and  other  stations  in  the  interior,  Leichhardt;  Pine  River,  Fitzalan  (with  the  stamens 
united  at  the  base). — Benth.  Mount  Perry,  J.  Keys ; Mulgrave  River,  Bellenden  Ker  Exped.  1889. 

Some  Stanthorpe  specimens  have  quite  coriaceous  leaves. 

Wood  makes  good  axe-handles. — Schneider. 

Wood  of  a red  colour,  close  in  grain,  hard  and  tough  ; used  for  shipbuilding  and  wheelwright’s 
work. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  167. 


3.  C.  COCCineus  (scarlet),  F.  v.  M.  F ray m.  i.  18  ; Benth.  FI.  Amt)-,  iii.  120. 

Very  closely  allied  to  C.  lanceolatus  and  C.  salignus.  Leaves  rigid,  almost 
pungent,  1 to  ljin.  long,  the  midrib  and  nerve-like  margins  prominent,  the 
pinnate  veins  inconspicuous,  the  under  surface  often  and  sometimes  both  surfaces 
glandular-scabrous.  Flowers  rather  large,  the  spikes  not  very  dense,  the 
rhachis  and  calyxes  pubescent  or  glabrous.  Calyx-tube  2 to  2|  lines  long  ; 

lobes  short  and  broad.  Petals  2 to  3 lines  diameter.  Stamens  f to  lin.  long, 
red  with  yellow  anthers,  numerous,  quite  free.  Fruiting  spikes  dense,  the 
calyx  more  contracted  at  the  orifice  than  in  C.  lanceolatus — C.  rugulosus,  Miq.  in 
Ned.  Kraidk.  Arch.  iv.  141,  but  scarcely  of  DC. 

Hab.:  Stanthorpe,  Duncan. 

4.  C.  salignus  (Willow-like),  DC.  Prod.  iii.  223  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  120. 
A tall  shrub  or  small  tree  attaining  sometimes  30  to  40ft.,  and  often  undis- 
tinguishable  in  foliage  and  inflorescence  from  < '.  lanceolatus,  the  leaves  are, 
however,  usually  more  acute,  more  distinctly  penniveined,  and  the  nerve-like 
margins  often  more  prominent ; in  some  forms,  however,  the  venation  is,  on  the 
contrary,  more  obscure.  Spikes  in  the  common  form  glabrous,  more  rarely  the 
rhachis  and  calyxes  pubescent  or  villous.  Flowers  generally  rather  smaller  than 
in  C.  lanceolatus,  the  calyx-lobes  more  ovate.  Stamens  pale  yellow  or  rarely  light 
pink,  usually  rather  under  Mn.  long.  Fruiting-calyx  and  capsule  as  in  C.  lanceo- 
latus.— Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  131  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  54  ; Metrosideros  saligna, 
Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  272  ; Vent.  Jard.  Cels.  t.  70  ; Bonp).  PL  Malm.  t. 
4 ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  1821  ; Metrosideros  pallida,  Bonpl.  PI.  Malm.  101  t.  41  ; Callis- 
tetnon  pallidas,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  223;  C.  Jophanthus,  Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1302. 

Hab.:  Many  localities  in  south  Queensland. 

Wood  of  light  colour,  close-grained,  and  tough ; useful  for  any  purpose  where  strength  and 
durability  are  required. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  U’oods  No.  168. 

Var.  angustifolia.  Leaves  linear-lanceolate,  very  rigid,  almost  pungent,  1 to  2in.  long. 
Flowers  glabrous. — Stanthorpe,  J.  Davidson. 


5.  C.  pityoides  (Pine-like),  Miq.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  121.  A low 
dense  shrub,  branches  thickly  scarred  by  the  fallen  leaves.  Leaves  6 to  13 
lines  long,  at  first  hairy  with  long  white  hairs  and  almost  or  quite  linear, 
becoming  glabrous  and  semiterete  when  old,  the  leaf-scales  as  long  as  the  leaves, 
pinkish,  scarious  and  narrow-lanceolate,  not  so  pungent  as  the  old  leaves, 
and  striate.  Flower-spikes  1 to  1-tin.  long,  dense,  the  rhachis  and  calyxes 
slightly  hairy.  Bracts  ovate-oblong,  strongly  striate  along  the  centre,  the 
margins  broadly  scarious.  Calyx-lobes  rotund,  shorter  than  the  petals,  often 
pinkish.  Petals  whitish,  shorter  than  the  bracts.  Stamens  not  very  numerous, 
whitish,  free,  about  twice  the  length  of  the  petals.  Style  long  as  stamens. 
Fruiting-calyx  globose,  2 lines  diameter,  capsule  deeply  sunk,  velvety  outside  at 
the  top,  3-celled. 

Hab.:  Stanthorpe. 

As  stated  by  the  author  of  FI.  Austr.,  iii.  123,  this  species’  nearest  ally  is  C.  brachyandrus, 
Lindl.,  under  which  it  might  very  well  be  placed  as  a variety. 


596 


LI.  MYRTACEjE. 


13.  MELALEUCA,  Linn. 

(Said  to  be  from  the  trunk  being  black  and  the  foliage  white  in  some  of  the 

earlier-known  species.) 

(Gymnagathis,  Schau.;  Asteromyrtus,  Schau.) 

Calyx-tube  campanulate  or  urceolate,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base,  the  free 
part  erect  contracted  or  scarcely  dilated  ; lobes  5,  imbricate  or  open,  herbaceous 
or  more  or  less  scarious,  and  then  occasionally  irregularly  confluent.  Petals  5, 
orbicular,  spreading.  Stamens  indefinite,  much  longer  than  the  petals,  united  in 
5 distinct  bundles  opposite  the  petals ; the  united  part  or  claw  usually  flattened, 
from  very  short  and  broad  to  long  and  linear,  the  filaments  (or  free  parts)  fili- 
form, either  pinnately  arranged  along  the  margin  of  the  claw,  or  clustered  or 
digitate  at  the  end,  or  covering  also  the  inner  face  ; anthers  versatile,  the  cells 
parallel,  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  enclosed  in  the  calyx-tube,  inferior  or 
semi-inferior,  the  convex  summit  villous  (except  in  M.  calycina,  of  W.  Austr.)  with 
a central  depression  round  the  style  ; 3-celled,  with  indefinite  ovules  in  each  cell, 
either  numerous  and  closely  packed  on  the  outer  surface  of  a peltate  placenta  or 
few  and  ascending  on  a short  peltate  or  2-fid  placenta  ; style  filiform  with  a peltate 
capitate  or  frequently  very  small  stigma.  Capsule  enclosed  in  the  enlarged  and 
hardened  calyx,  crowned  by  the  cup-shaped  or  annular  free  part  of  the  tube,  the 
lobes  rarely  persistent,  opening  loculicidally  at  the  top  in  3 valves,  and  occa- 
sionally separable  from  the  calyx  into  3 cocci.  Seeds  more  or  less  cuneate,  the 
perfect  ones  usually  few,  testa  thin  ; embryo  straight  or  scarcely  curved  ; coty- 
ledons flat,  plano-convex  or  folded  and  embracing  each  other,  longer  than  the 
radicle. — Shrubs  or  trees.  Leaves  alternate  or  in  a few  species  opposite,  entire, 
usually  coriaceous,  flat  concave  or  semiterete,  1,  3 or  several  nerved,  very  rarely 
thinner  with  recurved  margins.  Flowers  red  white  or  yellow,  closely  sessile  and 
solitary  within  each  bract  or  floral  leaf,  in  heads  or  spikes,  or  rarely  solitary  and 
scattered,  the  axis  of  the  spike  usually  growing  out  during  or  after  the  flowering, 
the  fruiting  spike  forming  the  base  of  the  new  branch.  Bracts  usually  scale-like 
and  often  imbricate  in  the  young  spike,  but  usually  deciduous  long  before  flower- 
ing. Bracteoles  usually  small  and  deciduous,  or  sometimes  none. 

The  genus  is  probably  entirely  Australian,  for  the  few  supposed  species  common  in  the  Indian 
Archipelago  appear  to  be  varieties  of  a single  one  which  is  also  widely  dispersed  over  tropical 
and  Eastern  Australia.  It  is  also,  generally  speaking,  a well-defined  group,  readily  distinguished 
from  Callistemon  by  the  5-adelphous  stamens.  The  only  exceptions  are  one  or  two  species  in 
which  the  claws  of  the  staminal  bundles  are  so  short  as  to  connect  the  genus  with  Callistemon,  of 
which  one  species  (C.  speciosus)  has  the  stamens  almost  or  quite  5-adelphous,  but  single  tran- 
sitionary species  appear  scarcely  to  justify  the  union  of  very  large  groups  otherwise  well 
characterised. — Benth. 

The  great  similarity  of  structure  throughout  the  genus  prevents  the  establishing  any  definite 
subdivisions,  the  specific  distinctions  resting  chiefly  on  habit,  foliage,  and  inflorescence,  neither 
the  opposite  leaves  of  some  species,  nor  even  the  deciduous  calyx-rim  of  the  few  Asteromyrti, 
having  any  other  character  in  common  to  justify  their  separation  as  sections.  The  following 
series,  therefore,  although  the  best  I have  been  able  to  devise,  will  be  found  in  many  instances 
to  pass  gradually  one  into  the  other. — Benth. 

Series  I.  Callistemonese. — Flowers  large,  red  or  rarely  greenish-yellow,  in  oblong  or 
cylindrical  dense  spikes,  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent,  lateral  on  the  old  wood  or  forming  the  base 
of  leafy  branches.  Calyx  broad  at  the  base.  Stamens  above  kin.  long  (not  exceeding  Jin.  in  any 
other  series). 

(The  inflorescence  and  the  length  of  the  stamens  give  many  of  the  species  of  this  series  the 
aspect  of  Callistemon,  but  the  stamens  are  always  very  distinctly  5-adelphous. — Benth.) 

Leaves  opposite,  lanceolate  or  oblong,  with  recurved  margins  and  pro- 
minent midrib,  § to  1 Jin.  long.  Staminal  claws  long I.  M.  hypericifolia. 

Series  II.  Decussatse. — Glabrous  bushy  shrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  small  flat  or  concave, 
nerveless  or  1 or  3- nerved . Flowers  pink  or  rarely  white,  in  small  heads  or  clusters  along  the 
previous  year's  stems,  or  forming  short  loose  spikes  at  the  base  of  the  neu.  shoot  already  grown  out 
before  the  flower  expands.  Bhachis  and  calyx  glabrous. 


Melaleuca . j 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


597 


(The  opposite-leaved  species  of  the  series  Spicifloree  differ  in  the  dense,  many-flowered  spikes, 
and  those  of  the  Capitatce  in  the  flowers,  whether  in  heads  or  solitary,  being  always  at  the  ends 
of  the  branches  at  the  time  of  expanding. — Benth.) 

Calyx-lobes  herbaceous,  persistent,  and  thickened  when  in  fruit.  Leaves 
oblong-lanceolate  or  almost  linear,  nearly  nerveless.  Filaments  pinnate 
along  the  upper  half  of  the  staminal  claws 2.  .1/.  thymifolia. 

Series  III.  Xiaterales. — Leaves  alternate.  Flmvers  usually  small,  in  axillary  or  lateral 
clusters,  the  axis  very  rarely  growing  out,  the  rhachis  woolly  pubescent  or  rarely  glabrous. — 
Gymnagathis,  Schau. 

Leaves  above  lin.  long,  obscurely  veined,  not  pungent,  broadly  oblong  to 

lanceolate,  flat,  obtuse,  or  scarcely  mucronate.  Calyx  pubescent  ...  3.  M.  acacioides. 

Series  IV.  Circumscisss. — Leaves  alternate  (usually  above  lin.  long).  Flowers  in  axil- 
lary, lateral,  or  rarely  terminal  globular  heads.  Calyx-tube  circumsciss  at  the  top  of  the  ovary 
after  flowering,  and  falling  off  with  the  lobes  (persistent  in  the  other  series).  Fruits  more  or  less 


cohering  in  a globular  head. — Asteromyrtus,  Schau. 

Leaves  oblong  or  lanceolate,  5 or  more-nerved. 

Bracts  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube.  Heads  mostly  lateral 4.  M.  symphyocarpa . 

Outer  bracts  exceeding  the  calyx-tube.  Heads  mostly  terminating  short 

leafy  branehlets 5.  M.  angustifolia. 


Series  V.  Spicifloree. — Leaves  alternate  or  opposite.  Flowers  either  solitary  or  few  and 
distinct,  or  in  more  or  less  interrupted  oblong -cylindrical  or  elongated  spikes,  sometimes  at  first 
terminal  but  the  axis  usually  growing  out  before  the  flowering  is  over,  rarely  in  dense  lateral 
cylindrical  spikes.  Rhachis  glabrous  pubescent  or  villous. 

Leaves  mostly  opposite,  narrow,  J to  ljin.  long,  nerveless  or  faintly  1- 

nerved,  flat  or  concave.  Spikes  loose.  Calyx  small 6.  M.  linariifolia . 

Leaves  mostly  alternate.  Flowers  usually  numerous. 

Leaves  flat,  often  vertical,  several-nerved,  mostly  above  lin.  long. 

Spikes  interrupted. 

Leaves  2 to  8in.  long,  broad  or  narrow.  Stamens  glabrous,  5 to  9 in 
each  bundle 7.  it/,  leucadevdron. 

Leaves  1 to  2in.  long,  narrow.  Stamens  pubescent,  12  to  20  in  each 

bundle 8.  M.  lasiandra. 

Leaves  flat,  concave  or  undulate,  several-nerved,  acute  or  pungent- 
pointed,  under  Jin.  or  rarely  fin.  long. 

Leaves  flat  or  undulate,  finely  striate,  mostly  about  Jin.  long. 

Leaves  linear-lanceolate  or  lanceolate.  Spikes  usually  interrupted. 

Calyx-lobes  triangular 9.  M.  genistifolia. 

Leaves  ovate-acuminate  or  ovate-lanceolate.  Spikes  rather  dense. 

Calyx-lobes  very  acute 10.  M.  styphelioides. 

Leaves  flat  or  semiterete,  narrow,  obscurely  1 or  3-nerved. 

Leaves  lanceolate  or  oblong-linear,  thick,  flat,  rather  crowded,  erect  or 
recurved,  mostly  under  Jin.  long.  Spikes  interrupted  near  the  ends 
of  the  branches . 11.  M,  Preissiana. 

Leaves  narrow-linear  or  semiterete,  crowded  with  small  fine  recurved 

points,  mostly  above  Jin.  long 12.  M.  armillaris. 

Series  VI.  Capitatae. — Leaves  alternate  or  opposite.  Flowers,  at  least  the  males,  in  ter- 
minal globular  heads,  the  perfect  ones  occasionally  in  oblong  or  cylindrical  dense  spikes,  the  axis 
not  grouping  out  until  after  the  flowering  is  over,  the  rhachis  usually  woolly  hirsute.  Fruiting 
spikes  very  dense,  globular  or  oblong,  rarely  reduced  to  2 or  3 fruits. 

Subseries  I.  Long'if’oliae. — Leaves  linear,  terete  or  flat,  mostly  above  1 in.  long.  Flowers 
usually  white  or  yellow. 

Leaves  linear,  terete  or  rarely  flat,  with  hooked  points  or  rarely  obtuse. 


Fruit-spikes  mostly  ovoid 13.  M.  nncinata. 

Leaves  terete,  with  straight  points.  Fruit-heads  small,  globular  . . . .14.  M.  hakeoides. 


Subseries  II.  Pallidiflorse.— Leaves  either  linear -subulate  and  under  lin.  or  broader  and 
under  %in.  long,  nerveless  or  rarely  prominently  nerved.  Flowers  white  or  pale-yellow,  rarely  pale- 
pink,  in  dense  terminal  heads  or  spikes,  the  males  often  globular,  the  perfect  ones  ovoid  or  oblong, 


rarely  globular,  the  rhachis  tomentose.  Fruits  in  dense  heads  or  spikes. 

Leaves  linear-subulate,  rigid,  pungent-pointed,  J to  lin.  long.  Flower- 

heads  globular  or  shortly  ovoid 15.  M.  nodosa. 

Leaves  4 to  6 lines  long,  obtuse  or  with  a short  straight  point.  Flowers 

white  or  pale.  Staminal  claws  as  long  as  (he  petals 10.  ,1/.  encifolia. 


598  LI.  MYRTACE/E.  [Melaleuca. 

Series  VII.  Peltatae. — Leaves  very  small,  often  scale-like,  more  or  less  peltately  attached. 
Flowers  small,  in  dense  heads  or  spikes. 

Branclilets  not  excavated.  Leaves  mostly  opposite,  the  points  spreading, 
or  not  closely  appressed  to  the  branch,  finely  pointed,  erect,  under  1 line 


long 17.  M.  minutifolia. 

ranchlets  excavated  for  the  scale-like,  peltate,  closely  appressed  leaves. 

Leaves  mostly  opposite.  Flowers  3 or  4 in  the  heads.  Calyx-lobes  and 

petals  striate.  Stamens  numerous  in  each  bundle IS.  M.foliolosa. 

Leaves  mostly  alternate.  Flowering  and  fruiting-spikes  oblong- 
cylindrical  19.  M.  tamariscina . 


M.  imbricata,  Link,  Enum.  ii.  272,  M.  taxifolia,  Schlecht.  in  Spreng.  Syst.  Veg.  iii.  336,  and 
.11.  temifolia,  F.  v.  M ; Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  123,  which  I have  not  seen,  are  not  suf- 
ficiently described  to  be  recognisable,  but  probably  belong  to  some  of  the  above  species.  There 
are  also  numerous  names  in  Steudel’s  “ Nomenclator”  taken  up  from  garden  lists,  Ac.,  and  not 
otherwise  published,  which  are  therefore  here  omitted. — 7 tenth. 


1.  IVI.  hypericifolia  (Hypericum-leaved),  Sw.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Sue.  iii.  279; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  131.  A tall  glabrous  shrub.  Leaves  mostly  opposite, 
lanceolate  or  elliptical-oblong,  obtuse  or  mucronate,  f to  l^in.  long,  flat  or  with 
recurved  margins,  the  midrib  prominent  underneath.  Flowers  large,  of  a rich 
red,  in  dense  spikes  of  about  2in.,  forming  the  base  of  leafy  branches.  Calyx- 
tube  sessile  by  its  broad  base,  about  1 line  long  ; lobes  broad,  obtuse,  herbaceous, 
about  as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  broad,  concave,  contracted  at  the  base,  about  2 
lines  long.  Staminal  bundles  at  least  fin.  long,  the  slender  claws  much  longer 
than  the  petals,  each  with  15  to  20  filaments  at  the  end.  Ovules  exceedingly 
numerous  in  each  cell,  covering  the  broad  peltate  placenta. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  214  ; 
Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  200 ; Vent.  Jard.  Cels.  t.  10  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  199  ; Metro- 
sideros  Injperici folia,  Salisb.  Prod.  351. 

Hab.:  In  1861  there  was  a plant  of  this  species  growing  in  the  Brisbane  Botanic 
Garden,  and  I understood  from  Mr.  W.  Hill,  who  was  then  Col.  Bot.,  that  he  obtained  it  from 
near  Ipswich. 

The  other  specimens  I have  seen,  in  Smith’s  and  several  other  herbaria,  are  all  cultivated, 
unless  it  be  one  in  Herb.  F.  Mueller,  of  doubtful  origin,  but  found  by  him  amongst  some 
Callistemons,  from  Moreton  Bay.  The  leaves  of  this  species,  rather  thin,  with  a tendency  to  a 
recurved  margin,  differ  in  this  respect  from  all  others,  except  M.  pauciflora. — Benth. 

2.  IVI . thymifolia  (Thyme-leaved),  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  278  and 
Exot.  Bot.  t.  36  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  134.  A low  glabrous  shrub,  rarely  above 
2ft.  high,  but  very  spreading  and  gregarious,  often  covering  acres  of  ground. 
Leaves  mostly  opposite,  lanceolate  elliptical-oblong  or  almost  linear,  nearly  acute, 
f to  Ain.  long  or  rarely  more,  rigid,  concave,  the  midrib  scarcely  conspicuous. 
Flowers  red,  not  numerous,  in  short  ovoid  or  oblong  lateral  spikes,  the  axis  often 
grotving  out  into  a leafy  shoot  at  the  time  of  flowering,  the  rhachis  and  calyxes 
glabrous.  Calyx-tube  ovoid,  rounded  at  the  base,  about  1^  line  long ; lobes  much 
shorter,  thick  and  obtuse.  Petals  nearly  2 lines  long.  Staminal  bundles  |7n. 
long,  the  claws  exceeding  the  petals,  each  with  numerous  filaments  pinnately 
arranged  along  the  upper  half  with  a few  on  the  inner  face  ; anthers  very  small. 
Ovules  exceedingly  numerous  in  each  cell,  densely  covering  the  peltate  placenta  ; 
style  rather  long,  the  stigma  slightly  dilated.  Fruiting-calyx  not  immersed  in 
thie  rhachis,  crowned  by  the  persistent  lobes. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  214  ; Bot.  Mag.  t. 
1868  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  439  ; Metrosideros  calycina,  Cav.  Ic.  iv.  20  t.  336  (from 
the  fig.  and  descr.) ; Melaleuca  coronata,  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  278  ; M.  gnidiafolia , 
Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  4 ; M.  discolor,  Reich,  in  Spreng.  Syst.  iii.  337 ; Iconogr. 
Exot.  t.  113;  Metrosideros  gracilis,  Salisb.  Prod.  352? 

Hab.:  Many  coastal  parts  of  southern  Queensland.  Flowering  in  October. 

In  some  of  K.  Brown’s  specimens  the  leaves  are  all  narrow-linear. — Benth. 

Yield  of  oil  from  dry  foliage,  13oz.  per  cwt. — J.  F.  Bailey. 


Melaleuca.] 


LI.  MYRTACEvE. 


599 

3.  IVI.  acacioides  (Acacia-like),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  116;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  138.  A small  tree,  of  a pale  green,  nearly  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  and 
inflorescence  pubescent.  Leaves  alternate,  from  broadly  oblong  and  under  lin. 
to  lanceolate  or  almost  linear  and  2in.  long,  obtuse  or  scarcely  mucronate, 
narrowed  at  the  base,  often  vertical,  flat,  thick,  faintly  3 or  5-nerved.  Flowers 
small,  in  small  dense  sessile  globular  heads,  mostly  axillary  or  lateral,  the  rhachis 
and  calyxes  pubescent.  Calyx-tube  nearly  globular,  about  f line  diameter  ; lobes 
short  and  broad.  Petals  about  A line  diameter.  Staminal  bundles  about  3 lines 
long,  the  claws  much  longer  than  the  petals,  unequally  divided  at  the  end  each 
into  5 to  7 filaments.  Ovules  few  in  each  cell,  rather  large,  erect  on  a short 
thick  placenta.  Fruiting-calyx  often  scarcely  above  1 line  diameter. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Torres  Straits. 

Wood  strong  and  dark-coloured.  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  Xo.  168c. 

4.  IVI.  symphyocarpa  (the  fruits  connate),  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Phil.  Inst. 
Viet.  iii.  44  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  138.  Glabrous  and  glaucous.  Leaves  alter- 
nate, oblong,  obtuse,  narrowed  at  the  base,  1A  to  2Ain.  long,  mostly  vertical,  flat, 
rigid,  many-nerved.  Flowers  in  dense  globular  lateral  heads,  sessile  on  the 
former  year’s  branches.  Bracts  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube.  Calyx-tube  cam- 
panulate,  often  angular  by  pressure,  about  2 lines  long,  glabrous  or  pubescent  ; 
lobes  short,  broad,  orbicular.  Petals  rather  above  1 line  diameter.  Staminal 
bundles  4 to  5 lines  long,  the  claws  narrow,  much  longer  than  the  petals,  each 
with  a tuft  of  slender  filaments  at  the  end.  Ovules  rather  numerous,  erect  on  a 
short  thick  placenta.  Fruiting-heads  Ain.  diameter,  the  fruits  closely  appressed 
or  connate,  the  calyx-tube  circumsciss  and  deciduous,  leaving  the  adnate  part 
truncate  on  a level  with  the  capsule. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  K.  Brown , and  Torres  Straits. 

Very  near  M.  angustifolia,  the  veins  of  the  leaves  more  numerous  and  slender,  the  inflores- 
cence mostly  lateral,  and  the  bracts  smaller. — Benth. 

Wood  dark-coloured,  close-grained,  hard,  and  prettily  marked.  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods 
Xo.  168a. 

5.  IVI.  angustifolia  (narrow-leaved),  (iartn.  Fruet.  i.  172  t.  35  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  139.  Glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  slightly  silky.  Leaves  alternate, 
narrow-ohlong,  often  narrowed  at  the  base,  mostly  1A  to  2in.  long,  flat,  often 
vertical,  distinctly  5-nerved.  Flowers  in  dense  terminal  globular  sessile  heads. 
Bracts  broad,  imbricate,  scale-like,  usually  exceeding  the  calyx-tube  and  per- 
sistent. Calyx-tube  broad,  nearly  2 lines  diameter,  silky-pubescent  or  villous  ; 
lobes  short  and  broad.  Petals  1A  line  diameter.  Staminal  bundles  4 to  5 lines 
long,  the  claws  united  in  a ring  at  the  base,  narrow,  exceeding  the  petals,  each 
with  a tuft  of  numerous  short  slender  filaments  at  the  end  ; anthers  very  small. 
Ovules  several  in  each  cell,  erect  on  a short  placenta.  Fruiting-heads  about  Ain. 
diameter,  the  fruits  very  closely  appressed  but  scarcely  connate,  the  calyx-tube 
circumsciss  and  deciduous,  leaving  the  adnate  part  truncate  on  a level  with  the 
tube. — Asterom  yrtus  Gartneri,  Schau.  in  Linmea,  xvii.  243. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander,  A.  Cunningham. 

In  some  heads  the  ovary  remains  small  and  abortive  ; the  calyx,  enlarging  much  after  flower- 
ing, becomes  broadly  campanulate,  bordered  by  the  persistent  hardened  claws  of  the  staminal 
bundles. — Benth. 

Gffirtner  figures  the  seeds  as  winged,  but  it  is  doubtful  whether  he  had  them  perfect,  otherwise 
he  would  have  seen  the  embryo. — Benth. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  hard  and  tough  ; excellent  for  posts  and  piles.  Bailey's  Cat.  QL  Woods 
Xo.  168b. 

6.  IVI.  linariifolia  (Toad  Flax-leaved),  Sin.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  278,  and 

F.rot.  Bot.  t.  56;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  140.  “ Poorga,”  Bundaberg,  Keys: 

“ Wooller- Wooller,”  St.  George,  Wedd.  A tall  tree  with  slender  branches,  the 
bark  white  in  papery  layers,  the  young  shoots  and  inflorescence  usually  pubescent, 


Part  If. 


GOO 


LI.  MYRTACE/E. 


[Melaleuca. 


the  adult  foliage  glabrous  and  often  glaucous.  Leaves  mostly  opposite,  linear  or 
linear-lanceolate,  concave  or  keeled,  rigid,  acute,  f to  Hin.  long.  Flowers  white 
fragrant  in  distinct  pairs,  in  rather  dense  spikes  of  1 to  lAin.,  at  first  terminal 
or  in  the  upper  axils,  the  axis  soon  growing  out  into  a leafy  branch,  the  rhachis 
and  calyxes  more  or  less  pubescent.  Calyx-tube  ovoid-globular,  1 to  1^  line 
long ; lobes  shorter,  broad,  obtuse,  with  searious  or  petal-like  margins.  Petals 
about  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes.  Staminal  bundles  often  Ain.  long  or 
more,  the  claws  long  and  narrow,  sometimes  filiform,  each  with  numerous 
pinnately-arranged  filaments  ; anthers  very  small.  Ovules  very  numerous  in 
each  cell,  covering  a peltate  placenta  ; style  rather  thick,  with  a broadly  capitate 
stigma.  Fruiting-calyx  not  much  enlarged.  Seeds  minute,  cuneate  ; cotyledons 
not  folded  and  not  much  longer  than  the  radicle. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  214  ; Metrosi- 
deros  hyssopifolia,  Cav.  Ic.  iv.  20,  t.  336. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart ; Rockhampton,  P.  O’Shanesy  (F.  v.  M.) 

Wood  of  a dark-red  colour,  very  durable  ; useful  for  building-stumps  and  piles  for  wharves. — 
Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  T Voods  No.  169. 

Yield  of  oil  from  dry  foliage,  28Joz.  per  cwt. — J.  F.  Bailey. 

Var.  trichostachya.  Leaves  usually  smaller.  Flowers  smaller  in  looser  spikes.  Bracts  very 
narrow.  Stamens  more  crowded  on  a shorter  claw.  Fruiting-calyx  rather  more  open. — .1/. 
trichostachya,  Lindl.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austin  277;  Belyando  River,  Mitchell;  Burdekin  and 
Gilbert  Rivers  and  along  the  N.E.  coast.  F.  v.  Mueller  : Cooper’s  Creek.  Howitt’s  Expedition. — 
Ben  th. 

7.  leucadendron  (white  tree),  Linn.  Mont.  105;  Benth.  hi.  Amtr.  iii. 
142.  “ Mor-ngi,”  Palmer  River,  Roth  ; “ Ivyenbooree,”  Mackay,  Nugent . 

“ Bichuma,”  Forest  Hill,  Macartney  ; “ Atchoourgo,”  Mitchell  River,  Palmer  : 
“ Oodgeroo,”  Stradbroke  Island,  Watkins.  A tree  often  attaining  a con- 
siderable size,  with  a thick  bark  peeling  off  in  thin  layers,  the  branches 
slender  and  often  pendulous,  but  in  some  situations  remaining  a small  tree  or 
shrub  with  rigid  erect  branches.  Leaves  alternate,  often  vertical,  elliptical 
or  lanceolate,  straight,  oblique  or  falcate,  acuminate,  acute  or  obtuse,  when  broad 
very  rigid  and  2 to  4in.  long,  when  narrow  sometimes  6 to  8in.  long,  narrowed 
into  a petiole,  3 to  7-nerved  with  anastomosing  veins.  Flower-spikes  elongated, 
more  or  less  interrupted,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together,  from  under  2 to  above  6in. 
long,  at  first  terminal  but  the  axis  growing  out  after  flowering  into  a leafy  branch, 
the  rhachis  and  calyxes  glabrous  pubescent  tomentose  or  woolly.  Calyx-tube 
ovoid,  usually  about  1A  line  long  ; lobes  short,  orbicular,  often  searious  on  the 
margin.  Petals  1 to  1A  line  diameter.  Staminal  bundles  under  Ain.  long,  the 
claws  sometimes  exceedingly  short,  sometimes  exceeding  the  petals,  each  with 
5 to  8 filaments  at  the  end.  Ovules  numerous,  ascending  on  an  oblong  placenta. 
Fruiting-calyx  usually  about  2 lines  diameter,  varying  from  globular  to  almost 
hemispherical.  Seeds  obovoid  or  cuneate ; cotyledons  obovate,  thick,  much 
longer  than  the  radicle. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  55  ; M.  leucadendron,  Linn.;  M. 
minor,  Sm.;  and  M.  riridiflnra,  Giertn.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  212,  and  the  same  names 
with  the  addition  of  M.  saligna,  Blume,  Mus.  Bot.  i.  66,  with  the  several 
synonyms  quoted  by  DC.  and  Blume;  Metrosideros  albida,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.,  referred 
in  Spreng.  Syst.  Cur.  Post.  194  to  M . coriarea  (attributed  by  mistake  to  Labill. 
instead  of  Salisb.  Prod.  352). 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  P,.  Brown  ; common  from  the  Victoria  River  to  the 
Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  F.  v.  Mueller  and  others ; on  the  coast  at  various  points  from  the  Burdekin 
to  Moreton  Bay,  Banks  and  Solander,  B.  Brown,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  v.  Mueller,  and  others;  also 
in  the  interior,  Mitchell. 

The  young  leaves  are  bruised  in  water,  and  drunk  for  headaches  and  colds  and  general 
sickness;  the  bark  is  used  for  bedding  to  lay  on  the  ground  and  to  form  camps  with,  Mitchell 
River. — Palmer. 

In  Queensland  the  species  is  represented  by  the  following  well-marked  varieties  : — 

Var.  lancifolia,  Bail.  Syn.  170.  Paper-barked  Tea-tree.  Often  a large  tree,  the  bark  in  thin 
white  layers,  the  leaves  stiff,  about  3 inches  long,  the  end  pointed  ; spikes  of  greenish-yellow 


Melaleuca. 


LT.  MYRTACEiE. 


601 


flowers,  often  two  together.  Common  in  the  swamps  of  the  south. — Yield  of  oil  from  dry- 
foliage,  30oz.  per  cwt.,  J.  F.  Bailey. — Wood  of  a pinkish-grey  colour,  close-grained  and  firm  ; 
very  useful  for  underground  work.  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  J Foods  No.  170. 

Var.  saligna,  Bail.  Syn.  170.  Drooping  Paper-barked  Tea-tree.  A large  tree,  the  bark  in 
white  papery  layers,  the  branches  long,  slender,  and  drooping  like  the  Weeping  Willow.  Leaves 
6 or  more  inches  long,  and  about  half  an  inch  wide;  the  flowers  very  distant  on  the  spike,  and 
the  stamens  sometimes  stained  with  red.  Swamps  and  river-sides  in  tropical  localities. — 
Wood  of  a light-grey  colour;  very  durable,  especially  in  underground  work.  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql. 
I Coach  No.  171. 

Var.  Cunninghamii,  Bail.  Syn.  171.  A small  tree,  the  bark  papery;  leaves  very  stiff,  large 
and  broad.  Flowers  large,  yellowish,  the  spikes  about  5in.  long.  Swamps  of  tropical  localities. 
— Wood  hard,  of  a dark  colour,  very  durable.  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  172. 

A form  of  the  latter  differs  in  its  flowers  being  of  a dark-red  colour.  Thursday  and  other 
islands  of  Torres  Straits. — Wood  similar.  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  172a. 

8.  IYI.  lasiandra  (velvety  flowers),  F.  r.  M.  Frar/m.  iii.  115;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  143.  A small  tree,  40  to  45ft.  high,  with  a stem  diameter  of  14  or 
15in.;  bark  grey,  fibrous,  lamellar  but  hard  and  closely  compact,  the  young 
foliage  silvery-silky,  becoming  glabrous  and  glaucous  with  age.  Leaves  alternate, 
often  vertical,  from  elliptical-lanceolate  to  almost  linear,  acute  or  acuminate, 
narrowed  at  the  base,  rigid,  thick,  1 to  2in.  long,  attaining  3 or  din.  in  length 
and  a breadth  of  4 lines,  obscurely  3 or  5-nerved,  nerves  rather  prominent. 
Flowers  small,  more  or  less  distant,  forming  irregularly  interrupted  slender  spikes 
24in.  long,  at  first  terminal,  but  the  axis  soon  growing  out  into  a leafy  shoot, 
the  rhachis  and  calyxes  softly  pubescent  or  villous.  Calyx-tube  ovoid,  about  1 
line  long  ; lobes  ovate,  about  half  as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  not  much  longer 
than  the  calvx-lobes,  often  pubescent.  Staminal  bundles  about  3 lines  long,  the 
claws  short,  more  or  less  pubescent  outside,  irregularly  divided,  each  into  12  to 
20  filaments,  of  which  some  are  often  free  almost  to  the  base  ; anthers  small. 
Ovules  exceedingly  numerous,  covering  a peltate  placenta;  style  pubescent  at  the 
base  ; stigma  small.  Fruiting-calyx  not  much  enlarged,  crowned  by  the  persistent 
lobes.  Seeds  not  winged. — Benth.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Musgrave,  Cape  York  Peninsula,  Geo.  . Jacobsen , who  speaks  of  it  as  “a  real  good,  useful 
timber,  durable  either  in  or  out  of  the  ground.” 

I think  there  can  be  no  doubt  as  to  this  being  identical  with  the  tree  found  by  Baron  Mueller 
on  the  Upper  Victoria  and  Fitzmaurice  Rivers  in  the  Northern  Territory  of  South  Australia. — 
Bat.  Bull.  iv.  10. 

9.  IVT . genistifolia  (Genista-leaved),  Shi.  in  Tram.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  277,  and 
Exot.  But.  t.  55  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  113.  A tall  shrub  or  tree,  attaining  30  to 
40ft.  or  even  more.  Bark  hard,  blackish,  glabrous  or  more  or  less  pubescent  or 
hirsute.  leaves  scattered,  lanceolate  or  linear-lanceolate,  rigid,  acute  and  often 
pungent-pointed,  flat,  usually  about  |4n.,  but  in  some  specimens  longer,  in  others 
much  shorter,  finely  striate,  with  7 or  more  nerves,  conspicuous  on  the  floral 
leaves,  almost  evanescent  on  others.  Flowers  in  loose  oblong  or  cylindrical 
spikes,  sometimes  terminal,  but  the  axis  often  growing  out  before  the  flowers 
expand,  often  mucn  interrupted,  and  many  of  the  bracts  developed  into  leaves 
like  the  stem  ones  or  shorter  and  broader,  rarely  all  small,  scale-like  and  deciduous, 
the  rhachis  and  calyxes  glabrous  pubescent  or  hirsute.  Calyx-tube  ovoid,  above  1 
line  long  ; lobes  triangular,  sometimes  acute,  almost  as  in  M.  sti/phelioides,  some- 
times more  obtuse  as  in  M.  Preissiana.  Petals  very  deciduous.  Htaminal  bundles 
about  3 lines  long,  the  claws  usually  shorter  but  sometimes  longer  than  the  petals, 
each  with  numerous  filaments.  Ovules  numerous,  closely  packed  on  a small  bifid 
placenta.  Fruiting-calyx  not  much  enlarged,  nearly  globular,  crowned  by  the 
persistent  lobes. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  212  ; M.  lanceolate,  Otto,  from  the  diagnoses  in 
DC.  Prod.  iii.  212  ; M.  hracteata,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  15  ; Metrosideras  decora , 
Salisb.  Prod.  352. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Fraser,  A.  Cunningham,  and  others  (flowering  in  April)  ; Fine  River 
and  Mount  Elliott,  Fitzalan  ; Marlborough,  Bowman. 

Wood  of  a grey  colour,  hard,  close-grained  and  tough  .^Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  172b, 


G02 


LI.  MYRTACE/E. 


[ Melaleuca . 


10.  IVI.  styphelioides  (Styphelia-like),  Sm.  in  Trans,  [.inn.  Soc.  iii.  275  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  144.  A tall  tree,  attaining  sometimes  80ft.,  the  young 
shoots  and  inflorescence  silky-pubescent  or  villous,  otherwise  glabrous.  Leaves 
alternate,  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate,  pungent-pointed,  mostly  about  Mn. 
long,  rigid,  finely  striate,  with  many  nerves.  Flowers  in  rather  dense  oblong  or 
cylindrical  spikes,  the  axis  growing  out  before  the  flowering  is  over,  the  floral 
leaves  either  like  the  stem  ones  and  persistent  or  reduced  to  deciduous  bracts. 
Calyx-tube  ovoid,  above  1 line  long  ; lobes  lanceolate,  acuminate,  rigid,  acute  or 
pungent,  as  long  as  or  longer  than  the  tube.  Petals  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes, 
but  very  deciduous.  Staminal  bundles  about  8 lines  long,  the  claws  not  much 
longer  than  the  calyx-lobe,  each  with  several  filaments  shortly  pinnate  along  the 
upper  portion.  Ovules  very  numerous,  closely  packed  on  a small  placenta. 
Fruiting  spikes  often  leafy,  the  calyxes  crowned  by  the  rigid  erect  lobes. — Colla, 
Hort.  Ripul.  App.  t.  6. 

Hab.:  Recorded  for  Queensland  by  F.  v.  Mueller,  without  locality. 

11.  Preissiana  (after  L.  Preiss),  Schau.  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  143  ; Benth. 

FI.  Austr.  iii.  145.  “ Moonah,”  Bundaberg,  Keys.  A tall  shrub  or  tree,  the 

young  shoots  and  often  the  inflorescence  more  or  less  pubescent  or  hirsute, 
becoming  glabrous  with  age.  Leaves  scattered,  rather  crowded,  erect,  spreading 
or  recurved,  lanceolate  or  oblong-linear,  acute  or  obtuse,  flat  thick  and  rigid, 
obscurely  1 or  3-nerved,  rarely  exceeding  iin.  in  length.  Flowers  not  large, 
white  or  yellowish,  in  loose  oblong  or  cylindrical  spikes,  1 to  2in.  long,  rarely 
terminal,  the  axis  growing  out  very  early  into  a leafy  shoot,  and  sometimes  much 
interrupted,  many  of  the  bracts  then  leafy  like  the  stern-leaves  ; rhachis  and 
calyxes  glabrous  or  tomentose.  Calyx-tube  ovoid,  thick,  above  1 line  long ; 
lobes  much  shorter,  ovate,  often  persistent.  Petals  about  1 line  diameter  or 
smaller.  Staminal  bundles  3 to  nearly  4 lines  long,  the  claws  rather  exceeding 
the  petals,  each  with  10  to  12  or  more  filaments  on  the  upper  portion.  Ovules 
very  numerous,  covering  a broad  peltate  placenta.—.!/,  pubescens,  Schau.  in 
Walp.  Rep.  ii.  928  ; 31.  currifolia,  Schlecht.  Linnrea,  xx.  654. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 

Var.  leiostachya.  Inflorescence  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  often  smaller,  narrower  and  more 
recurved.  Ovules  fewer. — .1/.  parvittora , Lindl.  Swan  Riv.  App.  8. 

12.  IVI.  armillaris  (bracelet-like),  Sm.  in  Trans.  I. inn.  Soc.  iii.  277  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  146.  A tall  glabrous  shrub  or  sometimes  a small  tree,  of  20  to 
30ft.  Leaves  scattered,  crowded,  narrow-linear,  acute  and  often  recurved  at  the 
end,  mostly  iin.  long  or  rather  more.  Flowers  almost  immersed  in  the  rhachis 
of  dense  or  interrupted  cylindrical  spikes,  forming  the  base  of  the  previous  year’s 
or  of  young  lateral  shoots.  Calyx-tube  about  1 line  long ; lobes  shorter,  almost 
acute.  Petals  above  1 line  long.  Staminal  bundles  3 to  4 lines  long  or  rather 
more,  each  with  numerous  filaments  pinnately  arranged  along  the  upper  half. 
Ovules  very  numerous  in  each  cell,  covering  a peltate  placenta ; stigma  broad. — 
DC.  Prod.  iii.  213  ; 31.  ericcefolia,  Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  175  ; Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t. 
76;  Wendl.  Coll.  i.  t.  29,  not  of  Sm.;  3Ietrosideros  armillaris , Gfertn.  Fruct.  i. 
171  t.  34  ; Cav.  Ic.  t.  335. 

Hab.:  Queensland  (without  locality),  F.  v.  M. 

13.  2VE.  uncinata  (hooked  leaves),  B.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew  ed.  2 iv.  414; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  150.  A tall  shrub,  the  young  shoots  more  or  less  silky 
pubescent.  Leaves  alternate,  linear-subulate,  terete  or  rarely  slightly  compressed, 
smooth,  sulcate  or  almost  angular,  1 to  2in.  long,  with  a fine  recurved  point,  or 
rarely  obtuse.  Flowers  small,  numerous,  in  very  dense  terminal  ovoid-oblong  or 
almost  globular  heads,  the  axis  often  growing  out  before  the  flowering  is  over  ; 
the  rhachis  and  calyxes  woolly,  hirsute,  or  rarely  quite  glabrous.  Calyx-tube  not 


Melaleuca .] 


El.  MYRTACE/E. 


603 


1 line  long  ; lobes  exceedingly  small  and  short.  Staminal  bundles  about  2 lines 
long,  the  claws  about  as  long  as  the  petals,  each  with  5 to  7 filaments.  Fruiting- 
spikes  very  dense  and  compact,  rarely  above  fin.  long  ; the  calyxes  turbinate, 
truncate,  about  If  line  long. —DC.  Prod.  iii.  213;  Schau.  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  138  ; 
M.  hamata,  Field,  and  Gardn.  Sert.  PI.  t.  74  ; M.  Drummondii,  Schau.  in  PI. 
Preiss.  i.  138  (rather  shorter-leaved  specimens) ; M.  semiteres,  Schau.  l.c.  143 
(leaves  longer,  not  hooked). 

Hab.:  Queensland  (without  locality),  F.  v.  M. 

14.  IVI.  hakeoides  (Hakea-like),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  151. 
A tall  shrub,  the  young  shoots  softly  silky-pubescent  and  somewhat  silvery,  the 
older  foliage  glabrous.  Leaves  alternate,  linear-subulate,  terete  or  slightly  com- 
pressed, usually  sulcate,  obtuse  or  acute,  1 to  2in.  long,  the  point  straight. 
Flowers  small,  in  dense  globular  or  rarely  ovoid  terminal  heads,  the  rhachis  and 
calyxes  usually  villous.  Calyx-tube  about  f line  long  ; lobes  very  small.  Petals 
scarcely  1 line  diameter.  Staminal  bundles  not  2 lines  long,  the  claws  short, 
each  with  3 to  7 filaments.  Ovules  few  in  each  cell,  erect  ; stigma  slightly 
dilated.  Fruiting-spikes  very  dense,  globular  or  ovoid,  the  calyxes  truncate, 
about  1 line  diameter. 

Hab.:  Towards  Cooper’s  Creek. 

15.  IVI.  nodosa  (flowers  in  knots),  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  276,  and 
Kxot.  Bot.  t.  35  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  158.  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree.  Leaves 
alternate,  linear  or  subulate,  rigid,  pungent-pointed,  mostly  f-  to  fin.,  or  on 
luxuriant  shoots  nearly  lin.  long.  Flowers  in  small  dense  globular  or  rarely 
ovoid  axillary  or  terminal  heads,  the  axis  not  growing  out  until  after  flowering, 
the  rhachis  tomentose.  Calyx-tube  broadly  campanulate,  about  f line  long  ; 
lobes  much  shorter,  obtuse  and  petal-like.  Petals  about  as  long  as  the  calyx- 
lobes.  Staminal  bundles  about  3 lines  long,  the  claws  about  as  long  as  the  petals, 
with  3 to  6 or  rarely  more  filaments  at  the  end.  Ovules  not  very  numerous,  erect 
on  a small  placenta.  Fruiting-heads  very  dense,  globular,  3 to  4 lines  diameter, 
the  calyxes  truncate. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  213;  Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  112  ; Metrosideros 
nodosa,  Gsertn.  Fruct.  i.  172  t.  34  ; Cav.  Ic.  iv.  t.  334  ; Melaleuca  juniperina , 
Sieb.;  Reichb.  Iconogr.  Exot.  ii.  4 t.  112;  M.  juniper oides,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  213; 
Metrosideros  juniperina,  and  M.  p ungens,  Reichb.  in  Spreng.  Syst.  Cur.  Post.  194. 

Hab.:  Common  in  southern  localities. 

16.  IVI.  ericifolia  (Heath-leaved),  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  276,  and 
Exot.  Bot.  t.  34;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  159.  A shrub  or  tree,  attaining  sometimes  a 
considerable  height,  usually  glabrous  and  often  glaucous,  with  virgate  branchlets. 
Leaves  scattered,  numerous,  often  recurved,  narrow-linear,  semiterete  or  convex 
underneath,  obtuse  or  scarcely  acute,  rarely  above  fin.  long.  Flowers  yellowish- 
white  or  rarely  red,  not  large  (the  males  ?)  in  ovoid  or  nearly  globular  terminal 
heads,  or  the  perfect  ones  in  oblong  and  cylindrical  spikes  of  f to  lin.,  with  the 
axis  soon  growing  out  into  a leafy  branch,  the  rhachis  tomentose.  Calyx 
glabrous  or  nearly  so,  short,  broad,  with  short,  broad,  obtuse,  herbaceous  lobes. 
Petals  above  1 line  long.  Staminal  bundles  3 to  4 lines  long,  the  claws  exceed- 
ing the  petals,  each  with  about  7 filaments  at  the  end.  Ovules  rather  numerous 
in  each  cell,  on  a short  peltate  placenta.  Fruiting  spikes  compact ; calyxes 
truncate. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  213;  Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  129;  M.  nodosa,  Sieb.  PI. 
Exs.,  not  of  Sm.;  M.  Gunniana,  Schau.  in  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  928  ; M.  heliophila, 
F.  v.  M.;  Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  120  (from  the  character  given). 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 

Var.  erubescems.  Flowers  red.  Stamens  usually  more  numerous.  .1/.  erubescent,  Otto,  Hort. 
Berol.  37,  according  to  DC.  Prod.  i.  214.  M.  diosmifolia,  Dum.  Corns,  according  to  DC.  l.c. 


604 


LI.  MYRTACEvE. 


[. Melaleuca . 


17.  IVI.  minutifolia  (leaves  minute),  F.  r.  M.  in  Tram.  lJhil.  Soc.  Viet.  iii. 
45  ; lit  nth.  FI.  Auatr.  iii.  102.  Nearly  allied  to  M.  tainariscina,  but  the  branch- 
lets  are  much  more  slender  and  not  excavated.  Leaves  opposite,  scale-like, 
appressed  and  imbricate,  almost  stem-clasping  and  peltately  attached  near  the 
base,  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  acutely  acuminate,  4 to  nearly  1 line  long. 
Flowers  small,  in  small  ovoid  terminal  heads,  the  rhachis  woolly.  Calyx-tube 
broad,  about  4 line  long  ; lobes  about  as  long,  broad,  striate.  Petals  nearly 
1 line  long.  Staminal  bundles  about  3 lines  long,  tbe  claws  narrow,  nearly  twice 
as  long  as  the  petals,  each  with  7 to  11  filaments  at  the  end  ; anthers  very  small. 
Fruiting-spikes  short,  the  calyxes  globular,  truncate,  about  14  line  long. 

Hab.:  Flinders  River,  Bowman. 

18.  IVI.  foliolosa  (leaves  small),  A.  Putin.  ll<rl>.:  Benth.  FI.  Auatr.  iii.  162. 
Branchlets  very  numerous,  erect  and  slender,  excavated  for  the  leaves,  the 
margins  of  the  excavations  forming  a fringe  round  them.  Leaves  opposite,  scale- 
like, broad,  thick,  obtuse,  triquetrous,  peltately  attached,  closely  appressed  and 
imbedded  in  the  excavations,  scarcely  1 line  long.  Flowers  only  seen  in  very 
young  bud,  few,  in  terminal  heads.  Calyx  campanulate,  with  short,  broad, 
striate  lobes.  Petals  striate.  Stamens  in  bundles  of  15  to  20,  the  claws  already 
as  long  as  the  petals.  Stigma  rather  broad.  Fruiting-calyxes  few  in  the  head  or 
solitary,  globular,  about  2 lines  diameter. 

Hab.:  Cape  Flinders,  A.  Cunningham. 

19.  IVI.  tamariscina  (Tamarix-leaved),  Hook,  in  Mitch.  Prop.  Auatr.  262 ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  163.  Branchlets  numerous,  slender  and  excavated  for  each 
leaf  as  in  M.  foliolosa,  but  in  a rather  less  degree.  Leaves  scarcely  opposite, 
scale-like,  peltate  and  half  stem-clasping,  closely  appressed  and  half  immersed  in 
the  excavations,  ovate,  concave,  rarely  above  4 line  long,  the  lower  ones  of  each 
branchlet  very  obtuse,  the  upper  ones  often  acuminate.  Flowers  not  seen. 
Fruiting-spikes  oblong  or  cylindrical,  4 to  lin.  long,  the  calyxes  often  densely 
packed,  globular,  about  14  line  diameter. 

Hab  : Belyando  River.  Mitchell,  and  other  localities  in  the  south-west. 


. 14.  ANGOPHORA,  Cav. 

(Goblet  form  of  fruit.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate-campanulate,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base,  the  free 
part  broad  and  open,  5-angled,  truncate,  with  5 small  distinct  teeth.  Petals  5, 
attached  by  their  broad  base,  herbaceous  and  aristate,  with-  coloured  margins, 
much  imbricate  in  the  bud,  spreading  and  separately  deciduous.  Stamens 
numerous,  free,  in  several  series,  filaments  filiform  ; anthers  versatile,  the  cells 
parallel,  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  inferior,  the  flat  summit  glabrous,  3 or 
4-celled,  with  many  ovules  in  each  cell,  ascending  on  a peltate  placenta ; style 
subulate,  with  a capitate  stigma.  Capsule  enclosed  in  and  adnate  to  the  hardened 
truncate  persistent  calyx-tube,  opening  loculicidally  in  3 or  4 valves.  Perfect 
seeds  (where  known)  1 in  each  cell,  large,  broad,  very  flat,  peltately  attached  on 
the  inner  face  ; testa  thin  ; embryo  straight ; cotyledons  thin,  flat,  or  folded  over- 
each  other  at  the  edge,  deeply  cordate,  the  radicle  slightly  clavate,  scarcely  pro- 
truding beyond  the  lobes  of  the  cotyledons. — Trees  or  shrubs,  usually  glaucous, 
pubescent  or  hispid  with  bristly  hairs.  Leaves  opposite  or  here  and  there  alter- 
nate, coriaceous,  penniveined.  Flowers  in  umbel-like  cymes  arranged  in  terminal 
corymbs.  Bracts  exceedingly  deciduous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Eastern  Australia.  It  is  very  nearly  allied  to  Eucalyptus,  the  petals 
similarly  truncate  at  the  base,  but  not  connate,  and  the  calyx-teeth,  although  small,  are  more 
prominent  than  in  any  Eucalyptus. — Benth. 


Angophora.] 


LI.  MYRTACEJL 


605 


Leaves  mostly  or  all  sessile  and  cordate  at  the  base.  Bark  rough  and  per- 
sistent. Flowers  small  and  numerous.  Calyx-tube  about  2 lines  long  . . 1.  .1.  subvelutina. 

Leaves  petiolate,  lanceolate,  not  cordate. 

Bark  rough  and  persistent.  Flowers  small  and  numerous.  Calyx-tube 

about  2 lines  long 2.  A.  intermedia . 

Bark  smooth  and  deciduous.  Flowers  rather  large,  not  very  numerous. 

Calyx-tube  about  3 lines  long 3.  A.  lanceolata. 


1.  A.  subvelutina  (somewhat  velvety),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  31  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  184.  A tree  attaining  a considerable  size  with  a rough  persistent  bark 
as  in  A.  intermedia.  Foliage  and  young  shoots  glaucous  or  minutely  pubescent, 
with  often  a few  bristles  on  the  flowering  branches  and  inflorescence.  Leaves 
sessile  or  nearly  so,  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  mostly  acute,  all  (excepting  rarely 
the  upper  ones)  cordate  at  the  base  with  rounded  auricles,  2 to  4in.  long,  the 
veins  numerous  but  not  usually  so  much  so  nor  so  fine  as  in  A.  intermedia. 
Flowers  small,  in  loose  corymbs,  precisely  as  in  A.  intermedia.  Fruiting  calyxes 
B to  4 lines  diameter. — A.  relutina,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  170. 

Hab.:  Brisbane,  Burnett,  and  Boyd  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

Wood  pinkish-grey,  close-grained,  and  tough. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  A To.  174. 

2.  A.  intermedia  (intermediate),  DC.  Prod.  iii.  222  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
184.  Apple-tree.  “ Bu-poo,”  Brisbane,  T.  Petrie ; “ Nankoor,”  Nanango,  Shirley. 
A tree  attaining  a considerable  size  with  a rough  persistent  fibrous  bark, 
quite  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent,  or  rarely  with  a few  bristles  on  the  inflores- 
cence. Leaves  distinctly  petiolate,  lanceolate  or  sometimes  ovate-lanceolate, 
acutely  acuminate,  2 to  4in.  long,  or  even  more  in  some  specimens.  Flowers 
rather  small,  in  loose  corymbs  or  trichotomous  panicles.  Calyx  usually  about  2 
lines  long  and  3 lines  diameter  at  the  top,  but  sometimes  rather  larger,  the  5 ribs 
very  prominent  and  the  secondary  ones  also  conspicuous  ; the  teeth  shortly 
subulate,  rarely  half  as  long  as  the  tube.  Fruiting  calyx  3 to  4 lines  diameter  at 
the  top  and  about  as  long. — Metrosidcros  Moribund  a,  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii. 
267  (not  of  Ventenat). 

Hab.:  In  the  interior,  Mitchell;  common  in  many  southern  and  western  localities. 

Wood  of  a grey  colour,  close-grained,  and  easily  worked. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  J foods  No.  175. 

Var.  Woodsiana.  A.  Woodsiana,  Bail.  Syn.  Ql.  FI.  172  and  Cat.  Ql.  Woods.  Differing  from 
the  typical  form  principally  in  the  larger  foliage  and  fruit,  and  in  the  larger  amount  of  dark-red 
liquid  gum  which  is  frequently  found  in  the  hollows  of  the  timber.  Hab.:  Eight-mile  Plains, 
near  Brisbane. — Wood  of  a pinkish  colour,  hard  and  heavy.  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  17oa. 


3.  A.  lanceolata  (lance-shaped  leaves),  Car.  Lc.  iv.  22  t.  339;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  184.  Rusty  Gum.  A tree  of  considerable  size,  the  bark  deciduous  in 
large  smooth  flakes  ; branches  and  foliage  glabrous  and  scarcely  glaucous,  or 
rarely  a few  bristles  on  the  inflorescence.  Leaves  distinctly  petiolate,  lanceolate, 
acuminate,  mostly  3 to  5in.  long,  coriaceous,  with  numerous  fine  parallel  pinnate 
veins.  Flowers  in  rather  dense  terminal  corymbs  or  short  panicles,  larger  and 
more  dense  than  in  A.  intermedia.  Calyx  usually  about  3 lines  long  and  4 lines 
broad  at  the  top,  the  teeth  very  minute  or  at  any  rate  shorter  and  thicker  than  in 
A.  intermedia,  and  the  secondary  ribs  often  very  short  or  quite  inconspicuous. 
Fruiting  calyx  usually  thick  and  very  smooth. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  222  ; Metrosideros 
costata,  Gsertn.  Fruct.  i.  171  t.  34  f.  2 ; M.  lanceolata,  Pers.  Syn.  PI.  ii.  25  (not 
the  sp.  with  the  same  name  l.c.  26);  M.  ajmct/nifolia,  Salisb.  Prod.  351. 

Hab.:  Burnett  River,  /•'.  v.  Mueller:  Boyd  River,  Herb.  F.  r.  Mueller:  Moveton  Bay,  (’. 
Stuart ; abundant  in  southern  localities. 

Wood  of  a pinkish  colour,  hard  anti  hea\y.  None  of  the  species  produce  a durable  timber. — 
Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  170. 


606 


LI.  MORTAGE;®. 


[ An;/op)iora. 


Both  the  living  tree  and  the  timber  somewhat  resemble  in  appearance  the  Spotted  Gum. 
Eucalyptus  maculata , and  the  latter  has  been  used  in  mistake  for  it;  but  if  exposed  to  the 
weather,  the  Angophora  wood  soon  perishes. 

Gum  contains  33-3%  of  tannin  ; resin,  5%.  Laulerer. 

Dr.  Joseph  Lauterer  remarks  that  the  tan-resin  gums  of  Myrtacete  are  entirely  endemic  in 
Australia,  no  plant  of  other  countries  yielding  an  exudation  similar  to  them  in  chemical 
composition. 


15.  EUCALYPTUS,  Lher. 

(Alluding  to  the  lid,  which  is  formed  of  the  corolla  and  calyx-lobes,  well  covering 
the  organs  of  reproduction  during  the  early  stage  of  their  growth.) 

(Eudesmia,  11.  Br.  Symphyomyrtus,  Scliau.) 

Calyx-tube  obconical  campanulate  or  oblong,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base 
or  rarely  to  the  top,  truncate  and  entire  after  the  falling  off  of  the  operculum  or 
with  4 minute  teeth  ; the  orifice  closed  by  a hemispherical  conical  or  elongated 
operculum  covering  the  stamens  in  the  bud  and  falling  off  entire  when  the 
stamens  expand,  this  operculum  usually  simple  (formed  of  the  concrete  petals  ?), 
thin  or  more  frequently  thick,  fleshy  or  woody,  the  veins  longitudinal,  numerous 
and  parallel  or  rarely  anastomosing,  the  separation  from  the  calyx-tube  usually 
but  not  always  marked  in  the  bud  by  a distinct  line  ; there  is  also  frequently  in 
the  very  young  bud  a very  thin  membranous  external  operculum  more  continuous 
with  the  calyx-tube  and  very  rarely  this  external  one  persists  nearly  as  long  as 
the  internal  one  and  is  as  thick  or  nearly  so.  Stamens  numerous,  in  several 
series,  free  or  very  rarely  very  shortly  united  at  the  base  into  4 clusters ; anthers 
versatile  or  attached  at  or  close  to  the  base,  the  cells  parallel  and  distinct  or 
divergent  and  confluent  at  the  apex,  opening  in  longitudinal  slits  or  rarely  in 
terminal  pores,  the  connective  often  thickened  into  a small  gland  either  separating 
the  cells  or  behind  them  when  they  are  contiguous.  Ovary  inferior,  the  summit 
glabrous,  flat,  convex  or  conical,  8 to  6-celled,  with  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell, 
in  2 to  4 rows,  on  an  adnate  or  oblong  and  peltate  axile  placenta  ; style  subulate 
or  rarely  almost  clavate,  with  a small  truncate  capitate  or  rarely  peltate  stigma. 
Fruit  consisting  of  the  more  or  less  enlarged  truncate  calyx-tube  enclosing  the 
capsule,  usually  of  a hard  and  woody  texture  and  interspersed  with  resinous 
receptacles,  the  persistent  disk  usually  thin  and  lining  the  orifice  of  the  calyx- 
tube  when  the  capsule  is  deeply  sunk  ; concave,  horizontal,  convex,  or  conically 
projecting,  and  more  or  less  contracting  the  orifice  when  the  capsule  is  not 
much  shorter  than,  as  long  as,  or  longer  than  the  calyx-tube  ; the  capsule  always 
adnate  to  the  calyx-tube  although  often  readily  separable  from  it  when  quite  ripe 
and  dry,  very  rarely  protruding  from  the  orifice  left  by  the  disk  before  maturity, 
but  opening  at  the  apex  in  as  many  valves  as  there  are  cells,  which  often  protrude, 
especially  when  acuminate  by  the  persistent  and  split  base  of  the  style.  Seeds 
for  the  greater  part  abortive  but  more  or  less  enlarged,  variously  shaped  and  of  a 
hard  apparently  uniform  texture,  one  or  very  few  in  each  cell  perfect,  usually 
ovoid  or  flattened  and  ovate  when  solitary,  variously  shaped  and  angular  when 
more  than  one  ripen  ; testa  black,  dark  coloured,  or  rarely  pale,  smooth  or 
granular,  not  hard,  in  a few  species  expanded  into  a variously- shaped  wing  ; 
hilum  ventral  or  lateral.  Embryo  with  broad  cordate  2-lobed  or  bipartite 
cotyledons,  folded  over  the  straight  radicle  but  otherwise  flat. — Shrubs  or  trees, 
attaining  sometimes  a gigantic  size,  secreting  more  or  less  of  resinous  gums, 
whence  their  common  appellation  of  (rum-trees.  Leaves  in  the  young  saplings  of 
many  species,  and  perhaps  all  in  some  species,  horizontal,  opposite,  sessile,  and 
cordate,  in  the  adult  shrub  or  tree  of  most  species  vertical  (or  sometimes 
horizontal),  alternate,  petiolate  and  passing  more  or  less  from  broadly  ovate  to 
lanceolate  acuminate  and  falcate,  always  rigid  whether  thick  or  thin,  penniveined, 
the  midrib  conspicuous  ; the  primary  veins  often  scarcely  perceptible  when  the 
leaves  are  thick  ; in  some  species  few,  irregular,  oblique,  and  anastomosing  and 


LI.  MYRTACLrE. 


607 


b!  ucalyptux.] 

passing  through  every  gradation  from  that  to  numerous  parallel  diverging  or 
transverse  veins,  always  converging  into  an  intramarginal  vein,  either  close  to  or 
more  or  less  distant  from  the  edge,  the  intermediate  reticulate  veinlets  rarely  very 
prominent,  and  scarcely  any  when  the  primary  veins  are  closely  parallel. 
Flowers  large  or  small,  in  umbels  or  heads,  usually  pedunculate,  rarely  reduced  to 
a single  sessile  flower,  the  peduncles  in  most  species  solitary  and  axillary  or 
lateral  (hy  the  abortion  of  the  floral  leaves)  either  at  the  base  of  the  year’s  shoot 
below  the  leaves  or  at  the  end  of  the  older  shoot  above  them.  Bracts  and 
bracteoles  when  present  so  early  deciduous  as  only  to  have  been  observed  in  a 
very  few  species. 

With  the  exception  of  two  species  extending  to  Timor,  and  two  or  three  or  perhaps  one 
single  somewhat  doubtful  species  from  the  Indian  Archipelago,  the  Eucalypti  are  all  Austra- 
lian, and  constitute  a large  portion  of  the  forest  vegetation.  Their  size  and  abundance,  as 
well  as  the  great  value  of  their  timber  and  other  products,  cause  them  to  be  well  known  to 
colonists  under  their  local  appellations  of  Gum,  Mahogany , and  Box-trees,  Stringy -harks,  Iron- 
barks,  Ac.  The  extraordinary  differences  in  the  foliage  of  many  species  at  different  periods  of 
their  growth  add  much  to  the  ordinary  difficulties  arising  from  the  gradual  transition  of 
varieties,  races,  or  species  one  into  the  other.  The  old  division  of  the  genus  according  to  the 
opposite  or  alternate  leaves  is  now  found  to  be  quite  fallacious,  so  many  species  having  them 
opposite  at  an  early  stage  and  alternate  when  full  grown ; the  second  character  generally  made 
use  of  in  books,  the  comparative  length  of  the  operculum  and  calyx-tube,  is  too  indefinite  for 
practical  use.  The  groups  have  been  established  in  the  first  place  upon  the  form  of  the  anthers 
and  secondly  upon  that  of  the  fruit,  and  in  some  cases  on  the  inflorescence  or  the  calyx.  It 
must  be  admitted,  indeed,  that  these  groups,  distinct  as  they  may  be  in  the  typical  species,  pass 
very  gradually  into  each  other  through  intermediate  forms,  but  I have  endeavoured  to  supply 
cross-references  to  facilitate  the  determination  of  dried  specimens  in  doubtful  cases. 

I have  thought  it  generally  useless  to  describe  the  branchlets  terete  or  angular,  for  in  those 
species  such  as  E.  pruinosa,  E.  tetragon a,  E.  tetraptera,  &c.,  where  the  angles  are  often  so 
prominent  as  to  be  almost  transformed  into  wings,  there  occur  branches,  often  on  the  same 
specimen,  quite  terete. 

The  form,  size  and  venation  of  the  leaves  described  has  always  been  taken  from  those  of  the 
flowering  branches  of  what  have  been  supposed  to  be  adult  trees  or  shrubs  ; when  not  stated  to 
the  contrary,  they  are  always  alternate  and  petiolate.  A great  majority  of  the  species  are  now 
known  to  have  on  the  young  sapling,  or  even  on  adventitious  barren  branches  of  older  trees, 
opposite  sessile  broad  or  cordate  leaves  passing  gradually  [into  the  ordinary  alternate  petiolate 
narrower  ones.  It  appeared  quite  useless  in  any  manner  to  describe  these  sapling  leaves  in  the 
several  species  where  they  have  been  observed,  for  they  present  at  once  the  greatest  similarity  in 
the  corresponding  leaves  of  different  species  and  the  greatest  dissimilarity  in  the  different  leaves 
of  the  same  species  or  specimen.  Where  in  the  following  pages  the  leaves  are  described  as 
opposite  and  sessile,  it  is  meant  that  they  retain  that  form  on  the  flowering  branches.  So  also 
in  the  venation,  characteristic  as  it  often  is  in  the  lanceolate  leaves,  the  specific  modifications 
disappear  in  a great  measure  as  the  leaf  gets  broader,  and  it  is  only  very  rarely  that  there  are 
any  appreciable  specific  differences  in  the  venation  of  the  sapling  leaves.  A very  few  at  that  age, 
especially  in  the  Corymbose  series,  appear  to  be  already  alternate,  but  to  have  the  lamina 
peltately  inserted  on  the  petiole  above  the  base,  but  data  on  that  point  are  but  very  scanty. 

Diagnostic  characters  are  sometimes  taken  from  the  position  of  the  leaves,  horizontal  or 
vertical,  and  the  comparative  colour  of  their  surfaces,  dark  above  and  pale  underneath  or 
similar  on  both  sides,  but  this  can  rarely  be  ascertained  from  dried  specimens.  In  general  it 
would  appear  that  the  horizontal  leaves  have  the  two  surfaces  different  and  the  veins  very 
divergent  or  transverse,  and  the  vertical  leaves  have  the  surfaces  similar  and  the  veins  oblique  ; 
so  that  where  the  leaves  of  the  adult  tree  are  alternate  lanceolate  and  foliate  with  oblique 
veins  they  are  usually  vertical,  whilst  the  opposite  ones  of  the  sapling  of  the  same  species  are 
horizontal. 

The  inflorescence  is  often  characteristic  of  species  or  even  of  groups,  but  cannot  always  be 
taken  absolutely  in  single  specimens.  The  umbels  are  as  a rule  universal,  but  are  always  in  a 
very  few  large-flowered  species,  and  occasionally  in  others,  reduced  to  a single  flower.  The 
length  of  the  peduncle  supporting  it,  either  absolute  or  compared  to  that  of  the  petiole,  to  which 
importance  is  given  in  old  diagnoses,  appears  to  be  rarely  available  as  a specific  character. 
Karely  above  lin.,  generally  varying  from  \ to  Jin.  and  sometimes  entirely  disappearing,  it  is 
only  in  the  few  cases  where  it  is  constantly  long  or  short  as  compared  to  these  dimensions  that  I 
have  referred  to  it.  These  peduncles  with  their  umbels  are,  however,  in  their  general  arrange- 
ment, of  some  importance,  constituting  three  types: — 1,  axillary  or  lateral,  that  is,  solitary  in 
the  axils  of  the  leaves,  or  along  the  branchlet  above  or  below  the  leaves;  2,  several  together  in 
short  simple  panicles  at  the  end  of  the  branchlet  or  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves ; and  3,  in  a 
compound  terminal  corymbose  panicle..  But  these  forms  appear  to  pass  into  each  other  very 
much  in  imperfect  specimens.  In  the  first  and  simplest  form,  the  floral  leaves  of  the  upper- 


LI.  MYRTACE/L. 


[fcucttlypiux. 


<>Ois 


most  umbels  or  of  very  short  axillary  flowering  branches  are  sometimes  quite  abortive,  con- 
verting the  inflorescence  into  the  second  form  ; in  this  again  the  lower  axillary  panicles  may 
be  occasionally  reduced  to  single  umbels  as  in  the  first,  and  even  in  the  terminal  corymb, 
characteristic  of  the  Corymbosa,  a single  specimen  may  here  and  there  show  an  axillary 
umbel,  or  after  dowering  the  branches  of  the  corymb  may  occasionally  though  rarely  grow 
out  into  leafy  shoots,  leaving  the  fruiting  umbels  lateral  below  the  new  leaves. 

The  form  and  dimensions  of  the  calyx-tube  (hypanthiuni  of  Schauer,  cupula  of  De  Candolle) 
are  taken  when  the  stamens  are  expanded  but  still  adhering ; after  they  fall  it  often  alters  so 
much  that  it  neither  indicates  the  form  it  had  in  dower  nor  yet  that  which  it  will  assume  in 
fruit. 

The  operculum  described  is  always  the  single  one,  probably  representing  the  petals,  as  it 
appears  when  ready  to  fall  off  for  the  expansion  of  the  stamens.  The  outer  one,  of  whose 
nature  there  is  still  much  doubt,  exists  probably  in  nearly  all  species  at  an  early  stage,  but  it  is 
usually  thin  and  falls  off  too  soon  to  be  worth  mentioning  in  descriptions.  Where,  as  in 
E.  platyphylla , it  persists  rather  longer,  it  appears  to  do  so  in  a very  variable  degree  in  the 
same  species. 

The  dimensions  given  for  the  stamens  refer  to  the  outer  ones  ; the  inner  ones  are  almost 
universally  gradually  shorter. 

The  number  of  cells  of  the  ovary  is  also  very  rarely  a guide  to  the  species.  They  generally 
vary  from  3 to  4 or  from  4 to  5,  very  rarely  6,  and  not  constantly  so  in  any  species  I have  seen. 
In  K.  phatniceu  there  are  only  two. 

For  similar  reasons  the  seeds  are  seldom  mentioned.  The  abortive  seeds  are  usually  numerous 
in  the  capsule,  unimpregnated  and  of  a hard  granular  uniform  texture,  but  enlarged,  especially 
those  near  the  top  of  the  capsule,  and  variously  shaped  according  to  the  degree  of  mutual 
pressure,  the  several  seeds  of  the  same  specimen  often  differing  more  from  each  other  than 
the  corresponding  ones  of  different  species.  Of  perfect  seeds  there  generally  only  ripen  either 
2 or  3 or  a single  one  in  each  cell,  and  their  shape  is  accordingly  modified.  They  are,  more- 
over, always  near  the  orifice  of  the  capsule  and  the  first  to  be  shed,  and  are  thus  unknown  in  a 
large  portion  of  the  species.  The  most  remarkable  are  those  of  the  majority  of  the  Corymbose, 
which  are  large  and  more  or  less  expanded  into  a membranous  wing. 

The  embyro  in  Eucalyptus  appears  always  to  have  the  cotyledons  folded  over  the  radicle,  but 
varies  much  in  the  shape  of  the  cotyledons,  very  broad  or  rather  narrow,  entire,  cordate,  2-lobed 
or  2-partite,  and  in  the  comparative  length  of  the  radicle,  and  these  differences  are  very  likeLy 
of  specific  constancy.  I have  therefore  thought  it  very  unsafe  to  rely  upon  any  of  the  modifica- 
tions observed  for  specific  distinction. — Benth. 

Series  I.  Ztenantheras. — Stamens  all  perfect  or  very  rarely  some  of  the  outer  ones  with 
abortive  anthers  ; anthers  reniform  or  broad,  and  flat , the  cells  diveryent  or  at  lenytli  divaricate, 
continuous  and  usually  confluent  at  the  apex. 

Leaves  falcate-lanceolate  ; apex  long  and  narrow.  Peduncles  broadly  com- 
pressed, bearing  3 to  7 nearly  sessile  flowers.  Fruit  globose-ovate, 

truncate,  8 to  10  lines  long,  3 to  4-eelled 1 . E.  Planchoniana. 

Leaves  falcate-lanceolate,  somewhat  glossy.  Umbels  containing  from  3 to 
10  pedicellate  flowers.  Anthers  broadly  cordate,  slits  divergent.  Fruit 

globose-urceolate,  5 to  7 lines  diameter,  3-celled 2 . E.  Baileyana. 

Leaves  on  the  young  plants  and  sprouts  from  old  stumps 

Small,  rough  and  hairy 4.  E.  euyenioides. 

Glabrous  and  often  large 6.  E.  acmenioides. 

Fruit  subglobose,  much  contracted  at  the  orifice,  the  rim  thin,  the 
capsule  sunk.  Buds  ovoid.  Operculum  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube. 

Leaf-veins  fine 5.  E.  piperita. 

Fruit  subglobose  or  depressed-globose,  the  rim  very  convex  or  prominent. 

Buds  ovoid  or  obovoid.  Operculum  usually  as  long  as  or  longer  than 

the  calyx-tube,  very  obtuse.  Flowers  and  fruits  sessile 3.  capitellata. 

Leaf-veins  numerous,  fine  and  parallel  (not  very  close).  Buds  ovoid- 
acuminate  or  oblong.  Operculum  as  long  as  or  longer  than  the 
calyx-tube. 

Stamens  much  inflected  in  the  bud.  Leaf-veins  oblique  or  diverging, 
often  scarcely  visible  on  the  upper  surface.  Fruit  under  Jin. 
diameter. 

Operculum  about  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Fruit  contracted  at  the 


orifice.  Peduncles  terete  or  nearly  so b.  E.  piperita .’ 

pereulum  longer  than  the  calyx-tube.  Fruit  straight  or  scarcely 
contracted  at  the  orifice.  Peduncles  more  or  less  flattened.  Umbels 
mostly  axillary.  Fruit-rim  usually  broad  and  flat 7.  E.  pilularis. 


Lt.  MYRTACE/E. 


609 


k mah/fdus.] 


Series  II.  Keterostemones. — Outer  stamens  anantherous  or  with  small  ahortice  anthers  : 
anthers  of  the  perfect  ones  small,  globular,  or  truncate,  the  cells  contiguous,  opening  in  pores  or  in 
oblong  slits,  sometimes  at  length  confluent. 

(The  species  are  all  Eastern,  one  only  tE.  gracilis)  extending  also  into  Western  Australia,  and 
all  extratropical,  two  only  (E.  h anna  stoma  and  F..  microcorys ) also  tropical  or  subtropical. 
Benth.) 

(The  outer  stamens  appear  also  to  be  anantherous  or  with  abortive  anthers  only  in  A.  virgata, 
and  perhaps  occasionally  but  only  in  a slight  degree  in  some  others  of  the  Renantherw,  and 
sometimes  but  rarely  in  E.  bicolor,  amongst  Poranthene,  but  I have  never  found  them  so  in  any 
of  the  other  species. — Benth.) 

Umbels  all  axillary  or  lateral.  Buds  ovoid  or  rarely  obovoid.  Peduncles 


terete  or  nearly  so. 

Flowers  large,  usually  3 to  5 in  the  umbel.  Leaves  very  coriaceous  . . 8.  E.  leucoxylun. 

Flowers  small,  4 to  8 in  the  umbel. 

Leaves  rather  thin.  Buds  ovoid,  often  acuminate.  Flowers  distinctly 

pedicellate 9.  E.  melliodora. 

Leaves  thick,  narrow,  black-dotted,  mostly  under  Bin.  long.  Buds 

obovoid,  tapering  into  short  pedicels  or  nearly  sessile 10.  E.  gracilis. 

Upper  umbels  forming  a terminal  corymb  or  panicle.  Buds  obovoid. 

Leaves  thick,  narrow,  black-dotted,  veins  scarcely  visible.  Flowers 

small.  Pedicels  short 10.  A',  gracilis. 

Leaves  rather  thin,  veins  very  oblique,  often  distinct.  Flowers  small. 

(Anthers  usually  all  perfect) 18.  E.  bicolor. 

Leaves  rather  thick,  not  dotted,  veins  numerous  and  more  regular  but 
fine,  sometimes  indistinct.  Flowers  moderate-sized  or  rather  large, 

distinctly  pedicellate ' 11.  A’,  paniculata. 

Upper  umbels  forming  a terminal  corymbose  panicle.  Buds  clavate, 
tapering  into  a rather  long  pedicel. 

Buds  very  angular.  Operculum  often  conical 11.  E.  paniculata. 

Buds  not  angular.  Operculum  very  short  and  obtuse. 

Leaves  very  coriaceous,  with  oblique  veins.  Fruit  pear-shaped  with 

a broad  flat  rim 12.  A’,  hamastoma. 

Leaves  rather  thin,  with  almost  transverse  veins.  Fruit  oblong  . . 13.  E.  microcorys. 


Sekies  III.  Porantherse.  — Stamens  all  perfect  (except,  rarely  in  E.  bicolor  and  perhaps  in 
E.  polyanthemos)  ; anthers  small  and  globular,  or  broader  than  long,  the  cells  distinct,  opening  in 
small  circular  pores,  sometimes  extending  at  length  into  oblong  slits. 

(The  leaves  when  narrow  have  always  an  oblique  irregular  venation.  The  operculum  is  short, 
and  the  capsule  sunk  in  the  fruit. — Benth.) 

(The  anthers  sometimes  are  very  nearly  those  of  the  Micranthene,  whilst  among  Micranthera 
there  are  several  species,  especially  A.  siderophloia,  in  which  the  anther-cells  are  so  short  that 
their  slits  are  at  first  little  more  than  pores. — Benth.) 

Umbels  few-flowered,  usually  several  together,  in  short  leafless  axillary  or 
terminal  panicles,  or  in  terminal  corymbs.  Operculum  short,  obtuse. 

Leaves  sessile,  opposite,  cordate  or  ovate.  Flowers  in  terminal  corym- 
bose panicles 14.  A’,  pruinosa. 

Leaves  orbicular  to  broad-ovate,  of  an  almost  ashy  hue  or  dull-greenish. 

Outer  stamens  sterile,  fertile  anthers  truncate,  opening  by  terminal  pores  15.  A’,  polyanthemos. 
Leaves  orbicular-ovate  or  roundish,  very  glossy.  Stamens  all  fertile ; 
anthers  roundish -ovate,  opening  below  the  summit  by  pores  or  short 


slits 10.  A’,  populifolia. 

Leaves  thick,  falcate  or  oblong-lanceolate,  shining  on  both  sides,  nerves 
somewhat  patent.  Operculum  sharply  conical,  about  Jin.  long.  Fruit 
Jin.  long  and  Jin.  thick 17.  A.  ochrophloia. 

Leaves  oblong  or  lanceolate,  rather  thin 18.  A.  bicolor. 

Umbels  several-flowered,  often  solitary  in  the  axils,  the  upper  ones  in 
terminal  corymbose  panicles.  Operculum  usually  conical,  about  as 
long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Pedicels  short. 

Leaves  broad  or  falcate,  very  coriaceous 19.  A’,  hemiphloia. 

Leaves  coriaceous,  with  numerous  fine  diverging  veins,  sometimes 

inconspicuous 23.  E.  siderophloia. 


Series  IV.  XVI  ic  rant  her  a;. — Anthers  eery  small,  globular,  or  broader  than  long,  with 
globular  distinct  cells  opening  in  lateral  slits. 

(Here  are  most  of  the  “ Ironbarks.”  The  series,  which  closely  connects  the  Borautherce  with 
the  Norinales,  i3  by  no  means  a distinctly  marked  one.  The  anthers  have  at  first  sight,  in  their 
shape  and  small  size,  the  appearance  of  the  former,  whilst  their  dehiscence  is  almost  or  quite 


610 


LI.  MYRTACE.E. 


[ Kuvahjpiu s. 


that  of  the  Normales.  As  in  Poranthe r<e,  the  operculum  is  short,  rarely  slightly  longer  than  the 
calyx-tube,  and  the  capsule  more  or  less  sunk,  although  the  points  of  the  valves  often 
protrude.  — Beitth.) 


Leaves  chartaceous,  ovate  to  elongate-lanceolate,  pale  on  under  side. 

Umbels  in  panicles.  Operculum  hemispherical.  Fruit  top-shaped  to 

semiovate 21.  A.  Cloeziana. 

Leaves  elongate-lanceolate,  pale  beneath,  2 to  Sin.  long,  J to  ljin.  broad, 
only  slightly  curved.  Panicles  mostly  terminal.  Operculum  mem- 
branous, conical,  about  2 lines  long 22.  A.  Howittiana. 

Leaves  all  or  mostly  sessile,  opposite  and  cordate 24.  A.  melanophloia. 

Calyx-tube  turbinate.  Operculum  very  obtuse.  Foliage  not  white  . . . 20.  A.  Bowmani. 

Leaves  mostly  lanceolate-falcate,  the  veins  inconspicuous.  Upper  umbels 

usually  paniculate 23.  A',  siderophloia . 

Flowers  distinctly  pedicellate.  Leaves  lanceolate,  falcate.  Calyx-tube 

above  2 lines  diameter,  turbinate 20.  A.  Bowmani. 

Leaves  of  the  flowering-branches  mostly  lanceolate  or  falcate  (sometimes 
broad),  coriaceous  with  numerous  fine  diverging  veins,  often  scarcely 
conspicuous.  Flowers  on  distinct  but  short  and  angular  pedicels. 

Upper  umbels  usually  in  a short  terminal  panicle 23.  A.  siderophloia. 


Leaves  of  the  flowering-bhmches  from  ovate  and  obtuse  to  narrow- 
lanceolate  and  acuminate,  with  numerous  tine  parallel  diverging  or 
transverse  veins,  usually  visible.  Flowers  small,  the  upper  umbels 
often  in  a short  panicle.  Operculum  about  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube. 

Leaves  usually  long  and  narrow. 

Fruit  subglobose,  truncate,  about  3 lines  diameter,  scarcely  contracted  at 

the  orifice \ 25.  A.  drepanopliylla . 

Fruit  from  nearly  globose  to  narrow-ovoid,  contracted  at  the  orifice,  not 

above  2 lines  diameter 27  E.  crebra. 

Fruit  of  E.  crebra.  but  4 lines  diameter 26.  A',  leptophleba. 

Fruit  hemispherical,  very  open,  not  above  2 lines  diameter,  half  the 

capsules  and  valves  protruding 30.  A’,  microtheca. 

Foliage  strongly  lemon-scented,  glaucous,  thick,  2 to  5in.  long.  Oper- 
culum conical.  Fruit  2 to  3 lines  long 28.  E.  Staigeriana . 

Leaves  elongate-lanceolate.  Flowers  exceedingly  small.  Operculum 

conical,  two  or  three  times  as  long  as  the  calyx 29.  E.  Raveretiana. 

Series  V.  Nor  males. — Stamens  alt  perfect ; anthers  oblong-ovate  or  nearly  ylobose , the 
cells  perfectly  distinct , parallel  (either  contiguous  with  the  connective-gland  behind,  them,  or  back 
to  back,  with  the  connective  between  them),  and  opening  longitudinally . 

Subseries  I.  Robust®. — Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  or  very  rarely  the  upper  ones  in  a 
terminal  corymb,  usually  flattened,  each  with  several  (rarely  only  1)  large  or  moderate-sized 
fowers,  sessile  or  tapering  into  thick  pedicels.  Leaves  usually  thick  and  alternate.  Rim  of 
the  fruit  concave,  with  a sunk  capsule. 

(E.  robusta  and  E.  botryoides  are  near  E.  resinifera  and  its  allies  in  foliage,  but  very  different 


in  fruit. — Benth.) 

Leaves  with  numerous  close  parallel  very  diverging  or  transverse  veins. 

Fruit  ovoid-oblong  or  urceolate,  the  capsule  deeply  sunk. 

Calyx  ribbed  or  winged,  1 to  2in.  long.  Peduncles  3 to  5-fiowered. 

Fruit  several-ribbed 31.  A.  miniata. 

Calyx  not  ribbed.  Fruit  rarely  above  Jin.  long. 

Buds  narrow,  acuminate,  Jin.  long  or  more.  Operculum  as  long  as 

or  longer  than  the  calyx-tube 32.  A.  robusta. 

Buds  ovoid-oblong,  not  above  4 lines  long.  Operculum  not  so  long  as 

the  calyx-tube 33.  A.  botryoides. 


Subseries  II.  Exsertse.  - Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  or  rarely  also  the  upper  ones  in  a 
short  terminal  corymb,  terete  or  scarcely  flattened,  each  with  several,  often  many  flowers,  usualli / 
pedunculate.  Fruit  globose  or  depressed,  usually  more  or  less  contracted  at  the  orifice,  the  rim 
convex  or  prominent,  rarely  flat,  the  capsule-valves  protruding  beyond  it. 

Leaves  alternate,  from  very  broadly  ovate  to  ovate-lanceolate,  usually 

obtuse,  whitish,  veined.  Operculum  obtuse,  longer  than  the  calyx-tube  36.  E.  dealbata. 
Leaves  orbicular  ovate  or  lanceolate,  very  thick,  the  veins  (fine  and  parallel 


or  irregular  and  oblique)  scarcely  conspicuous. 

Calyx  not  3 lines  diameter  Operculum  short 34.  A.  paHidifolia. 

Calyx  angular.  4 to  6 lines  diameter  or  more.  Operculum  as  long  as  or 
longer  than  the  calyx-tube.  Disk  forming  a raised  ring  or  prominent 

rim  round  the  somewhat  depressed  capsule 35.  E.  parity pliylla . 


Eucalyptus .] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


611 


Leaves  long-lanceolate  or  linear,  not  very  thick,  the  oblique  veins  fine  but 
often  conspicuous.  Calyx  rarely  above  3 lines  diameter. 

Pedicels  slender.  Operculum  more  or  less  rostrate.  Fruit-rim  very 


convex  or  conical. 

Bark  smooth,  white,  deciduous 37.  E.  rostrata. 

Bark  rough,  dark,  persistent  or  falling  off  in  fragments 38.  E.  exserta. 

Operculum  2 to  4 times  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube,  obtusely  conical. 

Fruit-rim  very  convex  or  conical 39.  K.  tereticornia. 

Subsekies  III.  Subexsertae.  -Peduncle*  axillary  or  lateral,  or  also  the  upper  ones  more  or 

less  paniculate,  terete  or  flattened,  several-flowered.  Calyx-tube  broad  at  the  orifice.  Fruit 


turbinate,  the  orifice  not  contracted,  the  capsule  level  nr  slightly  sunk,  the  valves  often  protruding 
when  open. 

This  subseries  differs  from  the  Exsertee  and  the  Inclusce  chiefly  in  the  fruit. — Benth. 

Leaves  broad,  with  very  diverging  veins  and  distinctly  reticulate. 

Flowers  nearly  sessile  or  on  short  thick  pedicels.  Operculum  hemi- 
spherical, short 40.  IS.  platyphylla. 

Flowers  small,  distinctly  pedicellate.  Operculum  conical 41.  E.  alba. 

Leaves  mostly  lanceolate,  rather  thick,  the  veins  fine  or  obscure,  oblique 

and  irregular.  Operculum  conical 42.  E.  Stuartiana. 

(See  also  23,  E.  siderophloia,  which  has  nearly  the  fruit  of  the  Subexsertce , but  with  very 
different  anthers. — Benth.) 

Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  to  lanceolate,  with  very  numerous,  fine,  close, 
parallel  veins. 

Operculum  conical,  about  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Leaves  usually 

narrow.  Flowers  nearly  sessile 43.  E.  saligna. 

Operculum  much  longer  than  the  calyx-tube.  Leaves  usually  broad- 
lanceolate.  Flowers  distinctly  pedicellate. 

Calyx-tube  under  Jin.  diameter 44.  E . resinifera . 

Calyx-tube  6 to  8 lines  diameter 45.  E.  pellita. 

Subsekies  IV.  Incluste. — Umbels  usually  several-flowered,  axillary  or  lateral  and  solitary 
or  several  together,  in  lateral  clusters  or  very  short  panicles,  and  then  sometimes  reduced  to  1 or  2 
flowers  each,  the  peduncles  terete  or  rarely  flattened.  Fruit  more  or  less  contracted  at  the  orifice, 
the  capsule  sunk,  the  valves  not  protruding , excepting  their  poin  ts  when,  acuminate  by  the  split  base 
of  the  style. 

Umbels  solitary  and  simple,  axillary  or  the  upper  ones  almost  paniculate. 

Operculum  hemispherical  or  flat.  Peduncles  with  several  pedicellate 
flowers.  Calyx  Jin.  long,  narrow.  Stamens  long  and  red.  Fruit  long, 

with  a distinct  neck 49.  E.  phcenicea. 

Umbels  several  together,  on  very  short  lateral  peduncles,  forming  short 
panicles  or  clusters  ; operculum  very  short  and  flat. 

Leaves  mostly  opposite,  large,  broad,  thick,  and  rigid.  Umbels  irregular, 

each  often  reduced  to  1 or  2 flowers.  Calyx  4 lines  diameter  or  more  46.  E.  yrandifolia. 
Leaves  from  broadly  cordate  and  opposite  to  broadly  lanceolate,  irregu- 
larly and  conspicuously  veined.  Umbels  many-flowered.  Pedicels 

long.  Calyx  under  3 lines  diameter 47.  E.  clavigera. 

Leases  all  narrow-lanceolate,  with  more  regular  veins.  Pedicels  shorter. 

Calyx  small  (the  whole  inflorescence  sometimes  reduced  to  an 

apparently  simple  cluster) 48.  E.  tesselaris. 

(See  also  27,  E.  crebra,  and  its  allies  amongst  Micrantherce,  which  have  frequently  a compound 
inflorescence,  and  a similar  fruit,  but  a conical  operculum  and  very  small  anthers.) 

Subseries  V.  Corymbosse.—  Flowers  usually  large,  (the  umbels  or  very  rarely  heads j all 
in  a terminal  corymbose  panicle,  or  rarely  a few  of  the  lower  ones  axillary.  Fruit  often  large, 
more  or  less  urceolate,  the  capsule  deeply  sunk.  Seeds  usually  large,  flat,  with  acute  edges,  often 
more  or  less  expanded  in  a variously -shaped  wing. 

Leaves  opposite,  sessile,  cordate.  Branehlets  and  calyx  bristly.  Leaves 

small.  Fruit  J to  fin.  long 50.  FI.  setosa. 

Leaves  alternate,  peltately  attached  to  the  petiole  above  the  base,  broadly 

ovate 52.  A.  peltata. 

Leaves  alternate,  petiolate,  broadly  ovate.  Fruit  globose,  truncate  or  with 

a very  short  neck 53.  E.  latifolia. 

Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or  lanceolate,  acuminate,  with  numerous  fine, 
close,  almost  transverse  veins.  Fruit  J to  fin.  long,  not  ribbed.  Seeds 
more  or  less  winged 55.  E.  corymbosa. 


LT.  MYRTACE^. 


r,  12 

Leaves  long-lanceolate,  thick  and  smooth,  the  very  fine  close  almost 
transverse  veins  scarcely  conspicuous. 

Fruit  oblong.  Operculum  depressed,  continuous  with  the  calyx  till  the 

moment  of  separation 56.  K.  terminalis. 

Fruit  nearly  globular,  with  a short  neck.  Operculum  depressed. 

(Flowers  smaller  than  in  the  other  species?) 57.  F.  dichromophloia. 

Leaves  narrow- lanceolate,  rigid,  with  more  oblique  veins.  Operculum 
double.  Flowers  pedicellate  in  3-flowered  umbels 59.  E.  muculata. 

Subseries  VI.  Eudesmiece. — Leaves,  including  the  petiolatc  ones,  mostly  oj)posite  or  nearly 
so.  Peduncles  usually  ‘A-flowered.  Calyx  with  4 minute  teeth,  more  or  less  conspicuous  below  the 
globular  hemispherical  or  flattened  operculum.  Stamens  sometimes  in  4 clusters. 


Stamens  very  numerous,  not  separated  into  clusters,  the  disk  not  lobed. 

Fruit  oblong-cylindrical,  above  Jin.  long ; rim  narrow  ; capsule  sunk. 

Leaves  long-lanceolate,  the  veins  usually  conspicuous.  Flowers  rather 

large 61.  F.  tetradontn. 

Branchlets  hairy.  Leaves  broad-coriaceous,  under  side  pale.  Umbels 
paniculate.  Peduncles  thick  ; pedicels  very  short.  Operculum  hemi- 
spherical   51.  F.  Torelliarw. 

Leaves  thick,  broadish,  pale  beneath.  Umbels  paniculate.  Operculum 
hemispherical.  Fruit  urceolate.  Seeds  winged  at  top 54.  F.  Albergiana. 

Leaves  rather  narrow,  elongate.  Umbels  paniculate.  Operculum  small. 

patellar.  Fruit  rather  small,  urceolate,  valves  enclosed 58.  F.  trachyphloia. 

Leaves  broadish,  green  on  both  sides.  Umbels  paniculate.  Operculum 
thick,  depressed,  hemispherical.  Fruit  large,  urceolate-semiovate,  valves 
enclosed.  Seeds  large 60.  F.  Watsoniana . 


1.  E.  Planchoniana  (after  Dr.  J.  E.  Planchon),  E.  r.  M.  Fragm.  xi.  48  ; 
Eucalypt.  Dec.  4.  A tall  tree,  stem  diameter  attaining  8ft.,  the  bark  fibrous  and 
persistent,  head  of  foliage  dense.  Leaves  scattered,  falcate-lanceolate,  4 to  Gin. 
long,  f to  lin.  or  more  broad,  parallel  nerves  somewhat  distant,  joining  the 
marginal  vein  which  is  rather  distant  from  the  edge.  Petioles  6 to  12  lines  long. 
Peduncles  as  long  or  longer  than  the  petioles,  compressed,  axillary,  each  with  a 
head  of  from  3 to  7 flowers,  sessile  or  very  shortly  pedicellate,  the  young  flower- 
buds  ellipsoid-cylindric,  compressed,  angular  towards  the  base,  about  -Jin.  long. 
Operculum  narrow  conical,  about  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube,  longitudinal  streaked. 
Stamens  all  fertile.  Anthers  ovate  or  roundish-cordate,  slits  longitudinal. 
Style  rather  long  ; stigma  not  dilated.  Fruit  8 to  12  lines  long  and  scarcely  less 
wide,  globose-ovate  with  a truncate  top,  3 or  4-celled,  streaked  with  angular  lines 
or  ribs.  Capsule  deeply  sunk.  Seeds  angular,  1 to  11  line  long. 

Hab.:  Eight-mile  Plains,  south  of  Brisbane. 

Gum  contains  68%  of  tannin  and  6-4%  of  metarabin. — Lauterer. 

Wood  of  a grev  colour,  hard  and  heavy  ; useful  for  house-building. — Hailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods 
So.  177. 

2.  E.  Baileyana  (after  F.  M.  Bailey),  F.  v.  M . Fragm.  xi.  37 ; Eucalypt. 
Dec.  3.  Rough  Stringybark.  A tall  tree  with  a very  rough,  persistent,  fibrous 
bark,  the  inner  yellowish  and  extremely  tough.  Stem  diameter  attaining  to  4ft. 
Branchlets  angular  towards  the  end.  Leaves  scattered,  of  somewhat  thin  con- 
sistence, falcate-lanceolate,  3 to  Sin.  long,  J to  lin.  broad,  somewhat  shining, 
green  on  both  sides,  oil  dots  copious,  the  parallel  lateral  nerves  moderately  patent, 
the  marginal  vein  rather  distant  from  the  edge.  Peduncles  6 to  12  lines  long, 
lateral,  slightly  compressed,  bearing  from  7 to  10  flowers  in  each  umbel. 
Pedicels  short,  more  prominent  under  the  fruit.  Flowers  crowded ; buds 
cvlindrical-clavate.  Stamens  all  fertile,  inflexed  before  expansion.  Anthers 
broadly  cordate,  opening  by  divergent  slits.  Stigma  not  dilated.  Fruit  globose- 
urceolate,  S to  7 lines  long  and  broad,  brown,  roughly  striate,  3-celled,  valves 
scarcely  exserted.  Seeds  oblong,  rather  large. 

Hab  : Eight-mile  Plains,  near  Brisbane. 

Wood  of  a light-grey  colour,  very  tough ; suitable  for  tool-handles  and  other  purposes  where 
toughness  is  required.  The  inner  bark  yields  a strong  fibre. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  So.  201. 


Eucalyptus.'] 


LT.  MYRTAOEj®. 


fiia 


8.  &>  capitellata  (flowers  in  small  heads),  Sm.  Bot.  Xu c.  Hull.  42,  and  in 
Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  285  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  206  ; F.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  3. 
A moderate-sized  or  large  tree  (200ft.  high,  F.  r.  M.),  with  a dark-grey  furrowed 
fibrous  bark  (/•'.  r.  M.)  Leaves  from  ovate-lanceolate  to  long-lanceolate,  generally 
very  oblique  and  falcate,  and  about  3 to  6in.  long,  very  thick  and  shining,  with 
oblique  venation.  Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  usually  thick  and  angular,  with 
about  5 to  10  sessile  flowers.  Buds  oblong- clavate  or  almost  ovoid.  Calyx-tube 
turbinate,  usually  about  3 lines  diameter,  and  rather  more  in  length.  Operculum 
thick,  very  obtuse,  and  about  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube,  or  rather  longer  and 
obtusely  conical.  Stamens  2 to  3 lines  long,  all  perfect ; anthers  with  divergent 
cells,  confluent  at  the  apex.  Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  depressed-globose,  4 to  5 
lines  diameter,  the  broad  rim  convex  and  often  very  prominent,  the  valves  of  the 
capsule  usually  protruding  beyond  it. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  218  ; E.  piperita,  Sm.  in 
White’s  Voy.  226,  with  a fig.  of  leaves  and  fruit,  but  not  the  one  described  in 
Trans.  Linn.  Soc.;  E.  piperita,  Reichb.  Ic.  et  Descr.  PI.  t.  42  (from  the  figure 
and  description). 

Hab.:  A growing  branchlet  without  fruit,  received  from  Rockingham  Bay.  Baron  Mueller 
considered  might  belong  to  this  species. 

The  young  seedlings,  Mueller  says,  have  glandular  hairs  in  tufts,  and  the  leaves  at  first 
opposite. 

4.  E.  eugenioides  (resembing  a Eugenia),  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.  n.  479  ; Benth.  El. 
Austr.  iii.  208  ; F.  r.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  10.  White  Stringybark.  Stringybark 
of  Nerang.  A tree,  sometimes  tall,  with  a fibrous  persistent  bark.  Leaves 
lanceolate,  falcate,  or  at  times  ovate,  veins  rather  distant,  and  the  intramarginal 
one  distant  from  the  edge ; oil-dots  copious.  Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral, 
bearing  an  umbel  of  from  4 to  20  flowers,  or  occasionally  forming  a panicle, 
somewhat  angular.  Operculum  hemispherical  or  conical.  Stamens  all  fertile  ; 
anthers  reniform  to  cordate,  opening  by  divergent  slits.  Stigma  not  broader  than 
the  summit  of  the  style.  Fruit  rather  small,  truncate-globose,  3 to  4 or  rarely 
5-celled. 

Hab  : Common  in  southern  localities  ; Herberton. 

The  young  adventitious  shoots  from  the  trunk  and  young  plants  are  rough  with  glandular  hairs ; 
valves  not  at  all  or  only  slightly  exserted ; seeds  angular. 

In  Mueller’s  Eucalyptographia  two  plates  of  this  species  are  given,  the  one  in  Dec.  10  a tall 
erect  tree,  plentiful  about  Nerang  Creek ; the  other,  in  Dec.  3 under  the  name  of  K.  piperita,  Sm., 
represents  the  form  met  with  near  Brisbane,  and  has  larger  leaves  and  fruit. 

Gum  contains  65%  of  tannin. — Lauterer. 

Wood  of  a brownish  or  pinkish  colour,  hard  and  tough ; used  for  house-building,  fencing-rails, 
Ac.  — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  177a. 

5.  E.  piperita  (Peppermint-scented)  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  286  (partly); 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  207 ; F.  r.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  3.  A tree  attaining  a considerable 
height,  with  a persistent  fibrous  bark  at  least  on  the  trunk.  Leaves  from  ovate- 
lanceolate  and  very  oblique  to  lanceolate  and  nearly  straight,  rarely  above  lin. 
long,  rather  thick  and  rigid,  the  veins  very  oblique.  Peduncles  axillary 
or  lateral,  usually  slightly  angular,  bearing  each  about  6 to  12  flowers  on 
short  thick  pedicels.  Buds  ovoid,  acuminate,  very  narrow  when  young.  Calyx- 
tube  about  2 lines  long  and  almost  as  much  diameter.  Operculum  conical  or 
acuminate,  rarely  very  obtuse,  about  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  all 
perfect,  about  2 lines  long;  anther  cells  diverging  or  divaricate,  usually  confluent 
at  the  apex.  Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  obovoid-globular,  2 to  3 lines  diameter, 
always  contracted  at  the  orifice,  the  rim  concave  or  rarely  nearly  flat,  the  capsule 
sunk,  the  very  small  valves  not  at  all  or  scarcely  protruding.-^— E.  acenmla,  Sieb. 
in  DC.  Prod.  iii.  217  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  64. 

Hab.:  There  is  some  doubt  as  to  whether  the  normal  form  of  this  species  has  been  met  with 
in  Queensland.  Some  years  ago,  however,  I gathered  a specimen  off  a tree  at  Highfields,  which 
Baron  Mueller  at  the  time  considered  the  normal  form,  and  now  I have  none  of  the  specimens  to 
refer  to, 


(514 


LI.  MYRTACEjE. 


r Eucalyptus, 


G.  E.  acmenioides  (Acmena-like),  ./.  C.  Schemer.  Walp.  Rep.  F.  r.  M. 
Eucalypt.  Dec.  10  ; Iienth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  208.  Broad-leaved  Stringy-bark  of 
Nerang.  “ Joora,  Brisbane,  Petrie.  A small  or  in  some  localities  large  tree, 
with  persistent  fibrous  bark  ; branchlets  angular.  Leaves  glabrous,  scattered, 
lanceolate,  large  and  broadly-ovate  on  the  shoots  from  old  stumps,  pale  on  the 
under  side,  the  intramarginal  vein  some  distance  from  the  edge,  oil  dots  numerous. 
Peduncles  slightly  flattened,  or  nearly  terete,  mostly  axillary  and  solitary, 
bearing  from  4 to  IB  rather  small  flowers,  pedicels  slender  and  short.  Oper- 
culum hemispherical,  pointed  at  the  summit.  Stamens  all  fertile,  except  some  of 
the  outermost ; inflexed  before  expansion.  Anthers  reniform,  cells  divergent. 
Stigma  not  dilated.  Fruit  semiovate,  not  large  nor  angular,  B,  4 or  5-celled, 
rim  thin,  valves  slightly  exserted.  Seeds  angular. — F.  triantlws,  F.  v.  M.  Cen. 
Austr.  PI. 

Hab.:  Many  southern  localities;  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy  : summit  of  Mount  Archer, 
A.  Thozet. 

Gum  contains  fi5%  of  tannin  ; metarabin,  7%.  — Lauterer. 

Wood  of  a grey  colour,  close  in  grain,  hard  and  durable;  used  in  house-building. — Bailey’s 
Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  178. 


7.  E.  pilularis  (fruit  globular),  8m.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Sac.  iii.  284  ; B tenth. 
FI.  A ustr.  iii.  208 ; F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  3.  Blackbutt.  “ Tcheergun  ” and 
“ Toi,”  Stradbroke  Island,  Watkins.  A moderate-sized  or  large  tree,  with  a dark- 
coloured  rough  and  somewhat  furrowed  persistent  bark,  or  falling  off  the  upper 
parts  in  long  strips.  Leaves  mostly  lanceolate,  falcate  or  nearly  straight,  acumi- 
nate, 3 to  6in.  long,  rather  thick  and  smooth,  the  veins  rather  oblique,  but  much 
less  so  and  more  numerous  and  parallel  than  in  F.  piperita  ; they  are  also  finer 
and  often  scarcely  conspicuous  or  slightly  impressed  on  the  upper  side.  Leaves 
on  young  plants  opposite,  sessile  and  narrow-lanceolate  (F.  r.  M.)  Peduncles 
axillary  or  lateral,  or  the  upper  ones  forming  more  or  less  of  a terminal  panicle 
distinctly  flattened  in  the  typical  form,  bearing  each  about  6 to  12  flowers,  the 
pedicels  often  thick  and  angular,  but  sometimes  rather  long  and  more  slender. 
Buds  acuminate.  Calyx-tube  about  2 lines  long  and  as  much  in  diameter. 
Operculum  conical  or  acuminate,  longer  than  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  2 to  B 
lines  long,  all  perfect,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  reniform  or  broad,  the  cells 
diverging  or  divaricate,  confluent  at  the  apex.  Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  semi- 
globose  or  subglobose,  truncate,  4 to  5 lines  diameter,  straight  or  slightly  con- 
tracted at  the  orifice,  the  rim  rather  broad,  flat  or  slightly  convex  or  concave,  the 
capsule  somewhat  sunk  or  nearly  level,  the  valves  usually  horizontal. — F.  persici- 
fulia,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  217,  and  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  61  (in  part  only),  not  of  Lodd; 

E.  semicorticata,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  86  ; E.  ornata  and  E. 
incrassata,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs. 

Hab.:  Many  southern  localities. 

Gum  contains  65%  of  tannin. — Lauterer. 

Wood  of  a light-grey  colour,  hard,  tough  and  durable;  used  for  house-building,  fencing,  and 
other  purposes  where  strength  and  durability  are  required. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  179. 

8.  E.  leucoxylon  (from  White  Gum,  the  local  name  in  South  Australia), 

F.  v.  M in  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  i.  33,  Frayni.  ii.  60,  and  Eucalypt.  Dec.  1 ; Ben  tit. 

FI.  Austr.  iii.  209.  A middle-sized  or  tall  tree,  with  a persistent  rough 

dark  iron-grey  bark  (F'.  v.  M.),  dark  grey  and  spongy  on  the  trunk,  soft  and 

white  on  the  branches  (Oldfield).  Leaves  lanceolate,  acuminate,  often  falcate, 
mostly  3 to  6in.  long,  thicker  and  more  coriaceous  than  in  E.  melliodora,  the 
veins  very  oblique  and  irregular,  sometimes  scarcely  conspicuous,  the  intra- 
marginal  one  usually  more  prominent,  not  far  from  the  edge,  except  when  the 
leaf  is  broad.  Oil-dots  copious.  Peduncles  axillary,  terete  or  slightly 

flattened,  with  3 or  sometimes  4 to  5,  rarely  6 to  11,  the  umbels  occasionally 

slightly  paniculate,  rather  large  flowers,  on  pedicels  often  as  long  as  or  longer 


Eucalyptus.] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


615 


than  the  calyx-tube.  Buds  ovoid,  acuminate.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  usually 
about  3 lines  long  and  as  much  in  diameter,  but  sometimes  longer.  Operculum 
conical  or  acuminate,  about  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  usually  very 
unequal,  red  or  white,  the  outer  ones  often  fin.  long  or  more,  and  usually 
anantherous,  the  inner  much  shorter ; filaments  pale  yellow,  rarely  pink,  rather 
thick  and  somewhat  glandular ; anthers  very  small,  truncate,  with  contiguous 
cells  opening  in  terminal  pores  or  short  oblong  slits,  sometimes  at  length  con- 
fluent. Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  4 to  7-celled,  obovoid  or  subglobular,  truncate, 
not  contracted  at  the  orifice,  3 or  sometimes  4 lines  diameter,  the  rim  thick,  flat, 
or  slightly  convex,  the  capsule  slightly  depressed. — Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv. 
126  ; E.  sideroxylon,  A.  Cunn.  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Aust.  339  (name  only). 

Hab.;  Inland  southern  localities. 

9.  E.  melliodora  (honey-scented),  A.  Cunn.  Herb.;  Sch.au.  in  Walp.  I!ep. 
ii.  924;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  210;  F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  2.  A moderate-sized 
tree  of  irregular  growth,  with  a smooth  bark  of  a pale  lead  colour  (A.  Cunniny- 
ham),  scaling  off  in  flakes  in  the  upper  part  of  the  tree  (C.  Moore J,  furrowed  and 
persistent  (F.  v.  Mueller).  Leaves  lanceolate,  usually  narrow,  acuminate  and 
often  falcate,  mostly  3 to  4in.  long,  rather  thick,  with  very  fine  and  rather 
numerous  but  oblique  veins,  the  intramarginal  one  at  a distance  from  the  edge. 
Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  somewhat  angular  but  not  thick,  usually  short,  each 
with  an  umbel  of  4 to  8 rather  small  flowers  on  pedicels  of  1 to  2 lines.  Calyx- 
tube  campanulate,  about  2 lines  long  and  diameter.  Operculum  hemispherical  or 
shortly  conical,  with  a small  point,  varying  from  a little  shorter  to  rather  longer 
than  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  about  2 lines  long,  the  outer  ones  rather  longer 
and  anantherous,  anthers  of  the  others  small,  with  contiguous  cells  opening  in 
terminal  pores,  sometimes  at  length  confluent.  Ovary  short,  flat- topped  ; stigma 
dilated.  Capsule  subglobose,  truncate,  not  contracted  at  the  orifice,  or  rarely 
ovoid  and  somewhat  contracted;  the  rim  rather  broad,  flat  or  nearly  so,  the 
capsule  more  or  less  depressed,  but  the  valves  sometimes  prominent  when  open. — 
F.  patentiflora,  Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  125. 

Hab.:  South-western  inland  localities. 


10.  H.  gracilis  (slender),  F.  v.  M in  Tram.  Viet.  Inst.  i.  35,  and  Fraym.  ii. 
55  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  211  ; F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt.  Bee.  3,  and  Brown's  Forest  FI. 
of  S.A.  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree,  with  a silvery-grey  smooth  bark  ( Beckler ). 
Leaves  narrow-lanceolate  or  oblong-linear,  mostly  mucronate,  and  under  3in. 
long,  thick  and  densely  dotted,  the  numerous  very  oblique  veins  scarcely  visible. 
Peduncles  short,  axillary  or  the  upper  ones  in  a short  terminal  panicle,  terete  or 
slightly  angular,  each  with  about  4 to  8 rather  small  flowers.  Calyx-tube 
obconical,  usually  rather  narrow  and  prominently  4-angled,  about  2 lines  long, 
tapering  into  a very  short  pedicel,  or  almost  sessile.  Operculum  shorter  than  the 
calyx-tube,  hemispherical  conical  or  shortly  acuminate.  Stamens  inflected  and 
flexuose,  the  outer  ones  anantherous  and  nearly  3 lines  long,  the  perfect  ones 
shorter ; anthers  small,  globular,  the  cells  distinct,  opening  in  circular  or  oblong 
pores.  Ovary  short.  Fruit  oblong  or  narrow-urceolate,  about  3 lines  long,  the 
rim  narrow,  the  capsule  deeply  sunk. — Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Ai-ch.  iv.  124  ; 
E.  fruticetorum,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  57  (partly). — Benth. 

Hab.:  Southern  inland  localities. 

Wood  hard,  heavy,  and  close  in  the  grain,  of  a yellowish-grey  colour,  tough  and  durable. — 
Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  180a. 

Var.  Thozetii.  This  differs  from  the  normal  form  in  its  longer  leaves,  narrow-ellipsoid  flower- 
buds,  smaller  less  angular  calyxes,  and  smaller  narrower  fruit,  and  forms  a tree  of  00ft, 
Hab.:  Expedition  Range.  K.  Bowman  and  B.  (Diliancsy  (F.  v.  M.  Eucalyptog.) 


Paht  II.  II 


LT.  MYRTACEjE. 


[Eucalyptus. 


GIG 

11.  22.  paniculata  (flowers  in  panicles),  Sin.  in  Trans.  I. inn.  Sac.  iii.  287; 

Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  211;  F.  r.  M.  Fucalypt.  Dec.  5.  A large  shrub  or 
small  or  moderate-sized  tree  with  a rough  bark.  Leaves  lanceolate,  falcate, 
acuminate,  usually  rather  broad,  8 to  5in.  long,  coriaceous  and  smooth  with 
numerous  fine  but  oblique  veins  usually  concealed  in  the  thick  texture.  Peduncles 
short,  angular,  usually  in  a short  terminal  corymbose  panicle  or  a few  solitary  in 
the  upper  axils,  each  with  about  8 to  6 or  sometimes  more  flowers.  Calyx-tube 
broadly  turbinate,  2 to  3 lines  diameter,  often  angular,  tapering  into  a short 
pedicel.  Operculum  from  obtuse  and  short  to  conical  and  as  long  as  the  calyx- 
tube.  Stamens  2 to  8 lines  long  or  sometimes  more,  inflected  in  the  bud,  the 
outer  ones  anantherous,  anthers  of  the  perfect  ones  small,  at  first  truncate,  the 
cells  opening  in  terminal  pores  or  at  length  spreading  out,  divaricate  and 
confluent.  Stigma  dilated.  Ovary  short,  flat-topped.  Fruit  3 to  4 rarely 

5-celled,  from  subglobose  to  obovoid-oblong,  truncate,  and  often  slightly  con- 
tracted at  the  orifice,  varying  from  2 to  4 lines  diameter,  the  rim  narrow,  the 
capsule  more  or  less  sunk.  Valves  not  exserted.  Testa  of  seeds  reticulate. — 
DC.  Prod.  iii.  220;  F.  tcrminalis,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs. 

Hab.:  In  southern  inland  localities. 

When  large,  the  flowers  almost  assume  the  aspect  of  the  smaller  forms  of  E.  corymbosa. — 
Bentli. 

12.  E.  hnemastoma  (orifice  of  fruit  red),  Sw.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  285  ; 

Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  212  ; F.  v.  M . Fucalypt.  Dec.  2.  Scribbly  Gum. 

“ Curgura,”  Brisbane,  Pettigrew.  A large  timber  tree  with  a smooth  deciduous 
bark,  leaving  a spotted  or  variegated  trunk  < F.  v.  Mueller)  or  the  bark  sometimes 
smooth  and  sometimes  half-barked,  like  Blackbutt  (Woolls).  Leaves  usually 
oblique  or  falcate,  lanceolate,  about  4 to  Gin.  long,  thickly  coriaceous,  the  veins 
very  oblique  not  close  and  often  anastomosing,  the  lower  ones  sometimes  broader 
and  more  reticulate.  Peduncles  more  or  less  angular  or  compressed,  axillary, 
lateral  or  a few  in  a short  terminal  oblong  panicle,  each  with  about  4 to  8 
flowers.  Buds  clavate.  Calyx  short  and  broad,  scarcely  2 lines  diameter, 
shortly  tapering  into  a rather  long,  thick  or  rather  slender  pedicel.  Operculum 
very  short,  hemispherical,  obtuse.  Stamens  2 to  3 lines  long,  inflected,  the  outer 
ones  longer  and  anantherous ; anthers  of  the  perfect  ones  small,  the  cells  opening 
in  short  oblong  divergent  at  length  confluent  slits.  Fruit  globular-truncate  or 
pear-shaped,  3 to  4 lines  diameter,  the  rim  broad,  flat  or  nearly  so,  usually  deeply 
coloured ; the  capsule  slightly  depressed,  the  valves  often  protruding  when  open 
but  very  soon  falling  away. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  219  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  51  ; F. 
signata,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  85  ; F.  falcifolia,  n.  22  and  23,  from 
N.  S.  Wales,  Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  137. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  C.  Moore;  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller;  common  in 
southern  localities  on  poor,  damp  soil. 

Gum  contains  66  3%  of  tannic  acid. — Lauterer. 

Wood  of  a grey  or  reddish  colour  ; not  durable  if  exposed  .—Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No  181. 

Yield  of  oil  from  fresh  foliage,  33|oz.  per  cwt. — Staiger. 

Yar.  micrantha.  Leaves  often  6 to  8in.  long  or  even  more,  the  veins  less  conspicuous. 
Flowers  and  fruit  much  smaller,  but  not  otherwise  different. — E.  micrantha,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  217, 
and  Mem.  Myrt.  t.  5. 


13.  E.  microcorys  (small  operculum),  F.  v.  M.  Frayin',  ii.  50  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  212  ; F.  v.  M.  Fucalypt.  Dec.  2.  Tallow-wood.  “Tee,”  Maroocliie. 
A tall  tree  with  a reddish  persistent  furrowed  fibrous  bark.  Leaves  mostly 
ovate- lanceolate  or  broad-lanceolate,  acuminate,  straight  or  very  unequal 
at  the  base,  about  3 to  4in.  long,  not  very  thick,  the  veins  very  divergent  and  fine 
but  prominent  and  not  close.  Oil-dots  copious.  Peduncles  axillary  or  in  short 
terminal  corymbs,  terete  or  somewhat  angular,  compressed,  \ to  lin.  long,  each 
with  about  4 to  8 flowers.  Buds  clavate,  short  but  tapering  into  thick  pedicels 
of  2 to  3 lines.  Calyx-tube  short,  with  the  free  part  much  dilated,  about  2 lines 


E ucalyptus.] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


017 


diameter.  Operculum  membranous,  much  shorter  than  the  calyx,  broad,  Hat, 
very  obtuse  or  slightly  umbonate.  Stamens  inflected  in  the  bud,  the  outer  ones 
about  3 lines  long,  anantherous  or  with  small  abortive  anthers,  the  inner  ones 
much  shorter  and  perfect ; anthers  small  with  diverging  at  length  confluent  cells. 
Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  obovoid-oblong,  contracted  at  the  orifice,  tapering  at 
^he  base,  about  3 lines  long  and  scarcely  2 lines  diameter,  the  rim  narrow,  the 
capsule  sunk,  3 to  4-celled.  Seeds  angular. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Sandy-mount  Range,  towards  Brisbane,  Leichhardt; 
Cleveland  Bay,  W.  Hill  (F.  v.  M.) 

Wood  of  a grey  colour,  close-grained,  very  tough  and  durable  ; used  for  ship  and  house 
building  purposes,  also  by  the  wheelwright  for  naves,  felloes,  and  spokes. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql. 
Woods  No.  182. 

Yield  of  oil  from  fresh  foliage,  18foz.  per  cwt. — Staiger. 


14.  E.  pruinosa  (frosty  foliage),  Schau.  in.  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  926  ; Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  213;  F.  v.  M.  Fucalypt.  Dec.  8.  “ Kullingal,”  Cloncurry,  Palmer. 

A tree  with  a persistent  whitish-grey  rough  and  fissured  bark  ( F.  c.  Mueller t , the 
foliage  often  glaucous  or  mealy-white.  Leaves  sessile,  opposite  or  nearly  so,  very 
rigid,  orbicular-cordate,  ovate  or  oblong,  obtuse  or  rarely  almost  acute,  mostly  2 
to  4in.  long.  Umbels  3 to  6-flowered,  on  short  peduncles  in  a terminal  corymb 
or  rarely  in  the  upper  axils.  Pedicels  terete,  nearly  or  quite  as  long  as  the  calyx- 
tube.  Calyx-tube  2 to  3 lines  diameter,  not  angled,  more  or  less  tapering  into  the 
pedicel.  Operculum  hemispherical  or  shortly  conical,  more  or  less  acuminate, 
rarely  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Stamens  2 to  nearly  3 lines  long,  inflected  in  the 
bud  ; anthers  very  small  and  globular,  with  distinct  parallel  cells,  opening  in  very 
short  slits  or  circular  pores.  Ovary  slightly  convex  in  the  centre.  Fruit  from 
ovoid-truncate  to  almost  cylindrical,  3 to  5 lines  diameter,  scarcely  or  not  at  all 
contracted  at  the  orifice,  the  rim  narrow,  the  capsule  slightly  sunk,  the  valves  4, 
rarely  3 or  5,  short,  sometimes  protruding.  Testa  of  seeds  netted,  mostly  broad 
and  short. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  132;  E.  spodophylla , F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  71. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown,  Henne ; Ravenswood,  Rev.  J.  E. 
Tenison-Woods. 

Like  many  other  species,  this  varies  with  the  young  branches  acutely  4-angled,  almost  winged, 
or  even  on  the  same  specimen  quite  terete,  and  very  much  in  the  size  of  the  flowers  and  the 
fruit. — Bentli. 

The  inside  bark  is  stripped,  wound  round  the  chest  and  body  very  tightly,  and  damped  with 
water,  for  pains,  rheumatism,  &c.,  the  sufferer  sitting  down  in  water  at  the  same  time. — Palmer. 


15.  E.  polyanthemos  (flowers  numerous),  Schau.  in  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  924  ; 
Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  213  ; F.  v.  M.  Fucalypt.  Dec.  3.  A tree  sometimes  small, 
sometimes  attaining  250ft.  (F.  v.  Mueller,  in  Victoria),  with  an  ash-grey 
persistent  rough  and  slightly  furrowed  grey  bark,  unless  in  the  upper  ramifications 
{F.  v.  Mueller).  Leaves  scattered,  on  rather  long  petioles,  not  glossy,  broadly 
ovate-orbicular  or  rhomboidal,  obtuse  or  rarely  shortly  acuminate,  mostly  under 
3in.  long,  passing  in  older  trees  into  ovate-lanceolate  obtuse  and  3in.  long  or 
more,  rather  rigid  with  fine  diverging  anastomosing  veins,  the  intramarginal  ones 
distant  from  the  edge  ; oil-dots  copious.  Umbels  of  3 to  6 small  flowers,  shortly 
pedunculate  and  usually  several  together  in  short  oblong  or  corymbose  panicles 
in  the  upper  axils  or  at  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Pedicels  rarely  longer  than  the 
calyx-tube  and  sometimes  very  short.  Calyx-tube  truncate-ovate,  twice  or  three 
times  as  long  and  broader  than  the  depressed  cr  pyramidal-hemispherical  faintly 
pointed  operculum.  Stamens  much  indexed  in  the  bud,  1 to  2 lines  long,  the 
outer  ones  anantherous ; anthers  small,  with  globular  distinct  cells,  opening  in 


018 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


[Eucalyptus. 


round  pores.  Stigma  somewhat  dilated.  Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  rather  small, 
semiovate,  with  a narrow  compressed  fragile  occasionally  somewhat  indented 
margin,  8 to  4 or  rarely  5-celled,  valves  not  exserted,  very  short. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Southern  parts. 

I have  no  sample  of  the  wood,  but  it  is  described  by  F.  v.  Mueller  l.c.  as  very  durable,  and 
of  a reddish  tinge,  close-grained,  hard  and  tough.  The  large  trees  are  said  to  be  frequently 
pipey.  The  wood  is  used  in  the  southern  colonies  for  naves  and  felloes. 

16.  E.  populifolia  (Poplar-leaved),  llook.  1c.  El.  t,.  879  ; F.  r.  M.  Eucalypt. 
Dec.  8.  Poplar  Box.  “ Mullet,”  St.  George,  Wedd.  Usually  a small  tree,  with 
wrinkled  somewhat  fissured  persistent  hark  on  trunk  and  branches,  the  foliage 
dense  and  glossy.  Branchlets  slender.  Leaves  2 to  4in.  long,  scattered,  orbicular- 
ovate  or  roundish,  very  glossy  and  deep  green  on  both  sides,  occasionally  verging 
into  an  oval-lanceolate  form  ; veins  very  spreading,  not  crowded,  the  intramarginal 
one  distant  from  the  edge ; oil-dots  copious.  Petioles  usually  long.  Umbels 
paniculate,  mostly  terminal,  some  lower  ones  singly  in  the  axils  of  the  leaves. 
Flowers  in  each  umbel  from  8 or  4 to  14,  small,  very  shortly  pedicellate.  Calyx- 
tube  almost  semiovate,  slightly  longer  than  the  nearly  hemispherical  operculum. 
Stamens  much  inflected  in  the  bud,  all  fertile.  Anthers  roundish-ovate,  opening 
below  the  summit  by  pores  or  abbreviated  slits.  Style  very  short,  stigma  some- 
what dilated.  Fruit  very  small,  semiovate,  4-celled  or  sometimes  8 or  5-celled; 
valves  very  short,  situated  close  beneath  the  rim.  Seeds  minute. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Met  with  generally  inland  from  the  southern  border  to  the  Burdekin  River,  and  islands 
of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria. 

Wood  of  a grey  or  light-brown  colour,  very  tough  and  strong,  hard  to  work,  but  is  a handsome 
wood  when  polished ; used  in  house-building,  dray-poles,  and  ship-building. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql. 
Woods  No.  183. 

F.  v.  Mueller,  Eucalypt.  Dec.  3,  says  that  the  variety  parviflora  of  E.  bicolor,  mentioned  in 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  215,  belongs  to  this  species.  Hab  : Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

17.  E.  ochrophloia  (yellow  bark),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  xi.  36.  Yellow 
Jacket.  “ Yapunyah,”  Bulloo  River,  J.  F.  Bailey.  A tree  usually  about  40  or 
50ft.  high,  with  a rather  thick  spongy  brownish-yellow  bark;  branchlets  slightly 
angular.  Leaves  thick,  glossy  on  both  sides,  oblong-lanceolate  or  falcate,  4 to 
6in.  long  and  A to  lin.  broad,  somewhat  unequal  at  the  base,  lateral  nerves  some- 
what patent,  the  intramarginal  distant  from  the  edge,  oil-dots  copious.  Umbels 
axillary,  solitary  or  crowded  in  corymbs.  Calyx-tube  with  pedicel  about  lin.  long. 
Operculum  acutely  conical,  abouc  3 lines  long.  Stamens  indexed  in  the  bud,  the 
outer  ones  without  anthers.  Anthers  cordate  or  reniform,  often  truncate,  slits 
irregular.  Style  shorter  than  the  stamens,  stigma  not  thicker  than  the  style. 
Fruit  clavate-ovate,  about  ^in.  long  and  scarcely  over  3 lines  thick,  not  angular, 
3 rarely  4-valved,  margins  of  the  orifice  thin,  taller  than  the  valves.  Seeds 
scarcely  A line  long. 

Hab.:  Paroo,  Cunnamulla,  and  other  inland  localities. 

Wood  of  a brownish  colour,  hard,  heavy,  and  close-grained. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  180. 

18.  E.  bicolor  (two-coloured),  A.  Cunn.  Herb.;  Hook,  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr. 
390;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  214.  A large  shrub  or  sometimes  a tree  of  30  to  40ft., 
with  a persistent  ash-grey  or  blackish  bark  (F.  v.  Mueller,  A.  Cunningham / , or  a 
tall  tree  with  a smooth  white  bark  (Hallachy  ) . Leaves  lanceolate,  narrow  or 
rarely  passing  into  ovate-lanceolate,  mostly  3 to  4in.  but  sometimes  5 or  6in. 
long,  not  very  thick,  often  glaucous  or  pale  coloured,  the  veins  fine,  oblique,  not 
close,  the  marginal  one  at  a distance  from  the  edge  and  sometimes  very  prominent 
towards  the  base  of  the  leaf.  Flowers  small,  about  3 to  8 together  on  short 
peduncles,  the  umbels  forming  usually  axillary  or  terminal  panicles  shorter  than 
the  leaves.  Pedicels  shorter  than  the  calyx.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  nearly  1A 
line  long.  Operculum  rather  thin,  hemispherical,  obtuse  or  umbonate,  shorter 


Eucalyptus.]  Ll.  MYRTACE.33.  619 

than  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  1 to  2 lines  long,  all  perfect  or  occasionally  a few 
of  the  outer  ones  without  anthers ; anthers  small,  with  2 small  globular  cells 
opening  in  round  pores  or  short  oblong  slits.  Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  globular- 
truncate  or  pear-shaped,  about  2 lines  diameter  or  rarely  nearly  3,  contracted  at 
the  orifice,  the  rim  rather  broad,  flat  or  depressed  ; the  capsule  somewhat 
depressed. — F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  90  : E.  pendula,  A.  Cunn.  in  Steud. 
Nom.  Bot.  ed.  2;  E.  largiflorens,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Viet.  Inst.  i.  34  and  Fragm. 

ii.  58  ; E.  hmnastoma,  Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  130,  as  to  the  Murray 
specimens,  not  of  Sm. 

Hab.:  Maranoa,  Port  Denison,  Flinders  and  Gilbert  Rivers. 

F.  v.  Mueller  says  E.  microthera  differs  from  E.  bicolor  in  its  more  numerous  and  very 
spreading  leaf-veins,  the  intramarginal  one  being  near  the  edge,  also  its  anthers  opening  by  slits 
not  pores,  and  its  prominently  exserted  capsule. 

The  southern  and  desert  specimens  have  rather  thicker  leaves  than  those  from  Queensland, 
but  I can  find  no  other  difference.  In  all  there  are  occasionally  2 or  8 flowers  on  the  specimen 
twice  the  size  of  the  others,  with  the  stamens  elongated  and  anantherous,  perhaps  owing  to  some 
insect.  The  species  differs  from  E.  polyanthemos  in  its  narrow  leaves. 

19.  E.  hemiphloia  (half -barked),  E.  i\  M.  Fragm.  ii.  G2  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 

iii.  216  ; F.  v.  M.  Eucalygt.  Dec.  5.  Gum-topped  Box.  ‘‘  Woorgun,”  Nanango, 
Shirley.  A tall  tree,  sometimes  reduced  to  a shrub.  Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or 
lanceolate,  falcate  or  nearly  straight,  about  3 to  5in.  long,  thick  and  rigid,  with 
very  oblique  distant  veins,  almost  as  in  E.  heemastoma,  intramarginal  vein  distant 
from  the  edge.  Oil-dots  concealed.  Peduncles  slightly  angular,  about  4 to 
8-flowered,  the  umbels  mostly  forming  short  terminal  panicles,  although  the 
fruiting  ones  are  usually  lateral  below  the  leaves.  Calyx-tube  2 to  2^  lines  long 
and  scarcely  so  much  in  diameter,  tapering  into  a short  thick  pedicel  or  almost 
sessile.  Operculum  conical,  acuminate,  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube  or  rarely 
shorter  and  more  obtuse.  Stamens  pale-coloured,  about  2 lines  long  or  rather 
more,  all  perfect,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  very  small,  globular,  the  cells 
distinct,  but  opening  in  pores  rather  than  in  slits.  Stigma  slightly  broader  than 
the  style.  Ovary  often  angular,  rather  deep,  slightly  conical  or  convex  in  the 
centre.  Fruit  ovoid-oblong,  about  3 to  4 lines  long,  truncate  and  slightly  con- 
tracted at  the  orifice,  very  smooth,  the  rim  narrow,  the  capsule  deeply  sunk. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay  to  Main  Range ; Herbert’s  Creek,  E.  Bow.nan  ; the  Dawson  and  Burnett 
Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Mackenzie  River,  V.  O’Shanesy ; Tambo,  &c. 

This  species  has  the  foliage  of  E.  luemastoma,  but  the  anthers  and  fruit  are  quite  different. 
In  Brown’s  S.  Australian  specimens  the  leaves  are  smaller,  but  in  Wilhelmi’s  they  are  the 
same  as  in  the  northern  ones,  and  I can  find  no  character  to  distinguish  them.  Both  R. 
Brown  and  F.  v.  Mueller  had  given  them  the  MS.  name  of  E.  purpurascens. — Benth. 

Wood  of  a yellowish-grey  colour,  very  tough  and  elastic. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  1 Foods  No.  184. 

Yield  of  oil  from  dry  foliage,  12oz.  per  cwt. — J.  F.  Bailey. 

Var.  (?)  parvitlora.  Flowers  considerably  smaller,  Mount  Elliott,  “ Ironbark,”  Fitzalan. 
Specimens  in  Leichhardt’s  collection,  marked  “ Box,”  from  the  range  behind  the  Condamine, 
appear  to  be  the  same  with  rather  longer  very  angular  flowers. — Benth. 

20.  E.  Bowmani  (after  E.  Bowman),  F.  r.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  El.  Austr.  iii. 
219.  Stature  and  bark  unknown.  Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or  broadly  lanceolate, 
mostly  4 to  Gin.  long,  straight  or  falcate,  obtuse  or  acuminate,  rigid,  with  oblique 
veins,  the  marginal  one  at  a distance  from  the  edge,  not  glaucous.  Peduncles 
axillary  or  lateral,  more  or  less  flattened,  bearing  4 to  8 rather  large  flowers. 
Buds  obtuse,  tapering  into  a short  very  thick  pedicel  or  nearly  sessile.  Calyx- 
tube  obovoid  or  turbinate,  thick,  about  2 lines  long  and  as  much  diameter. 
Operculum  thick,  obtuse,  longer  than  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  3 to  4 lines  long, 


620 


Li.  MYRTACEJE. 


[Eucalyptus. 


the  filaments  slender,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  very  small  and  globular',  but 
with  distinct  parallel  cells,  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  conical  in  the  centre. 
Fruit  unknown. 

Hab.:  Bowman  (Benth.  l.c.)  without  locality. 

I have  some  hesitation  in  describing  the  species  without  having  seen  the  fruit,  but  it  appears 
quite  distinct  from  any  other  one  known  to  me. — Benth. 

In  his  later  writings,  Baron  Mueller  merges  E.  Bowmani  in  E.  siderophloia  (see  Eucalypt. 
Dec.  4),  from  which  he  says  thfit  it  chiefly  differs  in  the  leaves  being  less  shining  and  in  the 
peduncles  being  broadly  compressed,  more  sessile  flowers  with  shorter  operculums,  and  more 
twisted  filaments.  The  bark  and  fruit  still  remains  unknown. 

21.  22.  Clceziana  (after  Professor  Clcez),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  xi.  44.  A tree  of 
about  80ft.  in  height  with  a dark  fissured  bark  on  the  trunk,  the  branchlets 
slightly  angular.  Leaves  chartaceous,  ovate  to  elongate-lanceolate,  3 to  5in.  long, 
f to  If  in.  broad,  deep-green  on  the  upper,  lighter  on  the  under  side,  the  primary 
lateral  nerves  joining  the  intramarginal  one  some  distance  from  the  edge  of  the 
leaf ; petioles  slender,  4 to  8 lines  long.  Panicles  lateral  or  terminal,  much 
branched.  Peduncles  moderately  stout,  rather  short.  Pedicels  somewhat  thick, 
under  the  flowers,  about  If  line  long,  unopen  flower-bud  globose-ovate,  2 lines 
long.  Operculum  depressed-hemispherical,  stamens  all  fertile,  indexed  in  the 
bud.  Filaments  very  thin,  capillary,  white,  about  4 lines  long.  Anthers  * line, 
almost  globose,  slits  longitudinal.  Style  about  2 lines  long  ; stigma  not  dilated. 
Young  fruit  semiglobose-turbinate  3 to  4-celled,  not  angular.  Seeds  not  winged. 

Hab.:  Ranges  about  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallachy  (F.  v.  M.) 

22.  E.  Howittiana  (after  A.  W.  Howitt),  F.  v.  M.  Wing's  Southern  Sci. 
Bee.  ii.  171.  and  Eucalypt.  Dec.  9.  A tree  attaining  the  height  of  about  100ft. 
and  trunk  diameter  of  4ft.,  bark  somewhat  stringy.  Branchlets  angular.  Leaves 
from  ovate  to  elongate-lanceolate,  2 to  5in.  long,  f to  lfin.  broad,  slightly  curved, 
dark-green  above,  much  paler  beneath.  The  lateral  nerves  numerous,  intra- 
marginal one  near  the  edge  ; petioles  f to  lin.  long.  Panicles  If  to  Gin.  long, 
axillary  and  terminal,  their  ultimate  branches  short,  angular,  bearing  generally 
from  3 to  6 sessile  flowers.  Calyx-tube  angular,  very  small,  semiovate  or  semi- 
elliptical. Operculum  almost  membranous,  about  2 lines  long,  acutely  conical. 
Stamens  all  fertile  ; filaments  in  the  bud  bent  inwards  towards  the  summit, 
nearly  white.  Anthers  minute,  cordate  or  reniform-globose,  opening  by  longi- 
tudinal slits,  their  gland  inconspicuous,  cells  ellipsoid,  parallel,  slits  marginal. 
Style  very  thin,  extending  considerably  beyond  the  calyx-tube.  Fruit  very  small, 
ovate-globular,  smooth  and  shining,  hardly  exceeding  2 lines  long,  truncate  and 
narrow  at  the  margin,  3 to  4-valved.  Seeds  very  small,  not  winged. 

Hab.:  Lake  Lucy,  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallacliy;  Herbert  River  and  Glendhu,  B.  R. 
Stafford  (F.  v.  M.) 

23.  22.  siderophloia  (Ironbark),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  220 ; F.  v.  M. 
Eucalypt.  Dec.  4.  Black  Ironbark.  “Wooroola,”  Bundaberg,  Keys ; “ Biggar,” 
Brisbane,  T.  Petrie.  A tall  tree,  with  a hard,  persistent,  rough,  blackish,  thick, 
deeply  furrowed  bark.  Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or  lanceolate,  much  acuminate, 
straight  or  more  frequently  falcate,  about  3 to  Gin.  long,  often  rather  thick,  with 
numerous  fine  diverging  veins,  the  intramarginal  one  close  to  the  edge. 
Peduncles  axillary  or  in  terminal  corymbose  panicles,  more  or  less  angular,  each 
with  about  6 to  12  flowers,  on  distinct  angular  pedicels.  Calyx-tube  shortly 
turbinate,  about  2 lines  diameter.  Operculum  conical  or  acuminate,  rather 
longer  than  the  calyx-tube  in  the  ordinary  form.  Stamens  2 to  3 lines  long,  all 
perfect,  outer  filaments  not  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  very  small  and  nearly 
globular,  the  cells  very  short,  opening  at  first  in  oblong  slits,  extending  at  length 
to  the  base  or  sometimes  almost  confluent.  Stigma  not  or  hardly  broader  than 
the  style.  Ovary  convex  or  conical  in  the  centre.  Fruit  globular-truncate  or 


E ucalyptus .] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


621 


obovoid,  8 to  4 lines  diameter,  not  at  all  or  scarcely  contracted  as  the  orifice,  the 
rim  slightly  prominent,  the  capsule  not  much  or  sometimes  scarcely  sunk,  the 
valves,  4 or  sometimes  5,  often  protruding. — E.  persicifolia,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  217, 
and  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  61  (in  part  only),  not  of  Lodd. 

Hab.:  Common  in  the  southern  portions  of  the  colony. 

Gum  contains  42-4%  of  arabin  and  28#5%  of  tannic  acid. — Lauterer. 

Wood  of  a grey  colour,  close-grained,  hard,  heavy  and  very  durable;  useful  for  the  large 
beams  in  buildings,  railway  sleepers,  and  other  work  where  strength  and  durability  are  required. 
— Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  185. 

Var.  rostrata , FI.  Austr.  iii.  220.  Large-leaved  Ironbark.  A large  tree,  the  bark  black  and 
thick,  deeply  furrowed,  but  still  separable  into  layers.  Leaves  very  large,  often  from  2 to  6 
inches  wide  on  young  trees.  Operculum  exceeding  iin.  in  length.  Capsule  valves  very  promi- 
nent. Hab.:  About  Taylor’s  Kange,  near  Brisbane. — Wood  red,  close  in  grain,  considered  the 
best  of  all  the  Ironbarks  for  building  purposes  ; it  is  very  hard  and  heavy,  or  otherwise  might  do 
for  cabinet  work.  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  185a. 

This  species  is  evidently  allied  to  E.  crebra  and  other  Ironbarks.  When  the  operculum  is 
short,  specimens  in  bud  only  are  much  like  those  of  the  Blackbutt,  E.  pilularis,  with  which  they 
appear  to  have  been  confounded  both  by  De  Candolle  and  F.  v.  Mueller,  although  distinguished 
by  all  collectors ; when  the  flowers  are  open  the  anthers  give  a ready  character,  -and  the  venation 
of  the  leaves  is  somewhat  different.  The  rostrate  variety,  when  in  young  bud,  resembles  E. 
resinifera , and  even  E.  tereticornis , but  the  venation,  and  still  more  the  anthers,  distinguish 
it. — Benth. 

E.  fibrosa,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  87,  from  the  Brisbane,  is  only  known  from  speci- 
mens in  young  bud,  in  which  state  I am  unable  to  distinguish  them  from  the  var.  rostrata  of  E. 
siderophloia.  F.  v.  Mueller,  however,  designates  it  as  a Stringybark.  It  may  therefore  prove  to 
be  distinct.  —Bentli. 

F.  v.  M.,  Eucalypt.  Dec.  4,  states  his  E.  fibrosa  to  be  only  the  variety  rostrata. 


24.  E.  melanophloia  (black  bark),  F.  V.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  98  ; 

Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  220.  “ Oombah,”  St.  George,  Wedcl;  “ Gaygar,”  Nanango, 

Shirley.  A small  often  crookecl-stemmed  spreading-headed  tree,  with  a blackish 
persistent  deeply  furrowed  bark,  the  foliage  more  or  less  glaucous  or  mealy-white. 
Leaves  sessile,  opposite,  from  cordate-ovate  or  orbicular  to  ovate-lanceolate, 
obtuse  or  acute.  Peduncles  short,  terete  or  nearly  so,  3 to  6-flowered,  axillary  or 
several  in  a short  terminal  corymb.  Buds  tapering  into  a pedicel  shorter  than 
the  calyx-tube  or  almost  sessile.  Calyx-tube  slightly  angular,  about  2 lines  long 
or  rather  more,  and  as  much  in  diameter.  Operculum  obtusely  conical,  shorter 
than  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  2 to  3 lines  long,  inflected  in  the  bud ; anthers 
very  small  and  globular,  but  the  cells  parallel  and  distinct.  Fruit  pear-shaped 
or  globular-truncate,  2 to  nearly  3 lines  diameter,  more  or  less  contracted  at  the 
orifice,  the  rim  thin,  the  capsule  nearly  on  a level  with  it,  and  the  valves  slightly 
protruding,  or  more  sunk  with  the  valves  included. 

Hab.:  Dawson,  Gilbert  and  Burnett  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Moreton  Bay,  “Silver-leaved 
Ironbark,”  C.  Moore  ; summit  of  the  Leichhardt  Range,  Bowman. 

Wood  towards  the  outside  greyish,  the  centre  red ; close  in  grain,  and  hard. — Bailey's  Cat. 
QL  Woods  No.  186. 

25.  32.  drepanophylla  (sickle-shaped  leaves),  F.  r.  M.:  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  221.  A tree,  usually  low  and  stunted,  the  bark  dark-grey  and  ribbed 
(Dallachy).  Leaves  long-lanceolate,  often  exceeding  6in.  and  usually  falcate, 
acuminate,  with  numerous  fine  parallel  and  very  diverging  veins,  often  scarcely 
conspicuous,  the  intramarginal  one  close  to  or  very  near  the  edge.  Umbels  3 to 
6-fiowered,  usually  3 or  4 together  in  short  axillary  or  terminal  panicles  or  the 
lower  ones  solitary,  the  peduncles  short  and  terete  or  nearly  so.  Calyx-tube 
obconical,  nearly  2 lines  long,  tapering  into  a short  thick  pedicel.  Operculum 
conical  or  obtuse,  usually  about  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  about  2 lines 
long,  inflected  in  the  bud;  anthers  very  small,  nearly  globular,  with  distinct 


622 


LI.  MYRTACE.#]. 


[Eucalyptus. 


parallel  cells.  Fruit  subglobose-truncate,  about  4 lines  diameter,  slightly  con- 
tracted at  the  orifice,  the  rim  rather  thin,  the  capsule  somewhat  sunk,  but  convex, 
so  that  the  valves  often  slightly  protrude. 

Hab  : Palmer  River,  T.  Gulliver  (F.  v.  M.) ; Cape  Sidmouth,  C.  Moore  (F.  v.  M). ; Trinity 
Bay,  If.  Hill  (F.  v.  M.) ; E.  coast,  A . Cunningham ; Keppel  Bay  and  Shoalwater  Bay,  R.  Brown ; 
Burdekin  Expedition,  Fitzalan ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan,  Dallachy;  Bowen  River,  Bowman. 

The  species  differs  from  E.  crebra  chiefly  in  the  large  flowers  and  in  the  larger,  harder,  and 
more  globular  fruit.  From  E.  leptoplileba  it  is  chiefly  distinguished  by  the  leaves  not  so  thick 
with  more  oblique  veins. — Benth. 

26.  E.  leptophleba  (slender-veined),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  86; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  221.  A moderate-sized  or  large  tree  with  a rather  wrinkled 
dark  persistent  rugged  bark,  breaking  up  into  numerous  small  angular  pieces  in 
the  manner  of  E.  tesselaris ; differing  but  slightly  from  E.  crebra,  in  the  leaves 
rather  thicker  and  broader,  and  in  the  fruits  much  larger,  attaining  4 lines 
diameter  or  rather  more. 

Hab.:  Gilbert  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Comet  River,  F.  O'Shanesy  (F.  v.  M.) 

27.  E.  crebra  (frequent),  F.  v.  M.  in.  Journ.  Linn.  Soc  iii.  87  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  221.  Narrow-leaved  Ironbark.  “ Tandoor,”  Brisbane,  T.  Petrie  ; “ Bie,” 
Nanango,  Shirley.  A small,  middle-sized  or  sometimes  a large  tree,  with  a hard 
greyish  rough  persistent  bark.  Leaves  oblong-lanceolate  or  linear,  straight  or 
more  frequently  falcate,  obtuse,  mucronate-acute  or  acuminate,  attaining  4 to  6in. 
long,  rather  thick  and  glaucous  or  yellowish  when  dry  in  the  northern  specimens, 
thinner  in  the  subtropical  ones,  with  numerous  very  diverging  fine  parallel  veins, 
the  intramarginal  one  very  near  or  close  to  the  edge.  Peduncles  short,  terete  or 
nearly  so,  each  with  about  8 to  6 small  flowers  on  short  but  distinct  pedicels ; 
umbels  usually  8 or  4 together  in  short  panicles  either  terminal  or  axillary,  or 
rarely  the  lower  ones  solitary  in  the  axils.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  about  1 line 
diameter.  Operculum  conical  or  hemispherical,  about  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube. 
Stamens  1 to  2 lines  long,  all  perfect,  inflected  in  the  bud ; anthers  very  small 
and  globular,  like  those  of  the  P or  anther ae,  but  the  cells  distinct  and  opening 
longitudinally  to  the  base.  Ovary  flat-topped  or  slightly  convex  in  the  centre. 
Fruit  obovoid- truncate,  not  2 lines  in  diameter,  somewhat  contracted  at  the  orifice 
and  often  shortly  attenuate  at  the  base,  the  rim  narrow,  the  capsule  more  or  less 
sunk,  but  the  tips  of  the  valves  often  protruding  when  open . — Metrosideros  salici- 
folia,  2,  Soland.  in  Gaertn.  Fruct.  i.  171  t.  84. 

Hab.:  Between  the  Flinders  and  Lynd  Rivers,  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  “ Ironbark  Tree,”  F.  v. 
Mueller , including  the  fruiting  specimens  of  E.  parviflora,  F.  v.  M.,  referred  to  in  Journ.  Linn. 
Soc.  iii.  90  ; from  the  Burdekin  to  Moreton  Bay,  often  forming  large  forests,  F.  v.  Mueller ; 
Rockhampton,  Dallachy — all  under  the  name  of  “ Ironbark.” 

In  flower,  this  species,  especially  in  the  thicker-leaved  specimens,  is  sometimes  difficult  to 
distinguish  from  E.  brachypoda ; the  leaves  are  generally  but  not  always  thinner  with  more 
oblique  veins,  and  the  flowers  not  so  glaucous  with  the  calyx  less  open  ; the  fruit  is,  however, 
very  differently  shaped. — Benth. 

Gum  contains  30%  of  tannin  and  42%  of  arabin. — Lauterer. 

Wood  white  near  the  bark,  all  the  rest  of  a pinkish-grey ; close-grained,  very  tough  and 
durable. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  187. 


28.  E.  Staigeriana  (after  K.  T.  Staiger),  F.  v.  M .,  inedit.  Syn.  Ql.  Flora, 
176.  Lemon-scented  Ironbark.  A small  tree  with  a dark  rugged  irregularly 
fissured  bark  and  glaucous  foliage.  Leaves  obovate  to  blunt-lanceolate,  2 to  5in. 
long,  £ to  2in  broad  ; texture  thick,  lateral  nerves  erecto-patent,  rather  close  with 
intermediate  anastomosing  transverse  veins,  all  very  slender  and  obscure  from  the 
thickness  of  the  leaf,  the  intramarginal  one  very  near  the  edge.  Oil-dots  copious. 
Petioles  i to  lin.  long.  Peduncles  lateral  or  axillary,  bearing  each  from  3 to  6 
flowers,  often  forming  terminal  panicles.  Operculum  conical.  Calyx-tube  about 


Pl.XXZ 


FijcxxlypULS  St ai cjf’ri&n rts,  F.vM 


GovfUtha.  Office 

Brisbane,.  0. 


F C Wills 


Eucalyptus.] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


623 


1 line  diameter.  Stamens  1 to  2 lines  long,  indexed  in  the  bud.  Anthers 
globular.  Fruit  about  2 lines  diameter  and  slightly  longer,  tapering  to  a pedicel 
which  is  a little  longer.  Seeds  lenticular. 

Hab.:  Palmer  River,  P.  F.  Sellheim. 

The  foliage  and  twigs  of  this  tree  have  the  fragrance  of  Lemons,  and  yield  by  distillation  about 
64£oz.  from  a cwt.  of.  the  dry  leaves. — Staiger. 

The  wood  is  a rich  red,  very  hard  and  durable  ; the  stems,  however,  are  frequently  pipey. — 
Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  188. 

29.  E.  Raveretiana  (after  Dr.  M.  C.  Raveret-Wattel),  V.  v.  M.  Fraym.  x. 
99  and  Kucalypt.  Dec.  1.  Thozet’s  Box  or  Iron-gum  Tree.  A tall  erect  tree, 
said  to  attain  the  height  of  300ft.,  trunk  3 or  4ft.  in  diameter;  bark  dark,  scaly, 
persistent  except  on  the  upper  branches,  branchlets  angular.  Leaves  chartaceous, 
ovate  to  elongate-lanceolate,  slightly  falcate,  3 to  5in.  long,  § to  l^in.  broad, 
almost  equal-sided  at  the  base,  oil-dots  copious,  pale  on  the  under  side  ; veins  fine 
and  somewhat  distant,  the  intramai’ginal  one  near  the  edge.  Petiole  rather  long. 
Panicles  axillary  and  terminal,  1 to  3in.  long,  few  or  many  small  flowers  in  each 
umbel.  Pedicels  1 to  2 lines  long.  Operculum  acutely  conical,  longer  than  the 
calyx-tube.  Filaments  white,  14  line  long,  all  fertile.  Anthers  renate-cordate, 
opening  by  longitudinal  slits.  Style  rather  long,  stigma  slightly  dilated.  Fruit 
scarcely  exceeding  1 line  broad,  3 or  rarely  4-celled,  the  valves  half-exserted. 
Seeds  angular. 

Hab.:  Rockhampton,  A.  Tliozet  and  P.  O'Shanesy ; the  Dawson  and  Nercool  Rivers,  fs. 
Bowman ; near  Port  Denison,  E.  Fitzalan  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 

Wood  of  a dark-drab  colour,  speckled  with  white  lines  ; close-grained,  very  hard,  and  tough  ; 
valuable  for  building  purposes,  and  would  be  useful  for  cabinet-work. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods 
No.  189. 

30.  E.  microtheca  (small-fruited),  F.  v.  M.  in  Joum.  Linn.  Noe.  iii.  87, 
Eucalypt.  Dec.  10.  “Coolibar”  of  many  parts;  “ Jinbul  ” or  “Kurleah,” 
Cloncurry,  Palmer;  “ Moolar,”  St.  George,  Wedd.  A tree  of  about  80ft.,  the 
diameter  said  to  attain  4ft.,  bark  rough,  ashy-grey,  below  mostly  persistent  but 
often  deciduous  in  the  upper  parts,  branchlets  slender  pendulous.  Leaves  narrow- 
lanceolate,  often  falcate,  sometimes  9in.  long,  of  a pale  greyish-green  on  both 
sides,  veins  faint,  the  primary  lateral  ones  close,  intramarginal  one  near  the 
edge.  Oil-dots  quite  concealed.  Umbels  3 to  8-flowered,  mostly  forming  terminal 
panicles.  Peduncles  slender.  Pedicels  from  very  short  to  as  long  as  the  calyx- 
tube.  Operculum  semiovate,  rather  longer  than  the  calyx.  Stamens  very 
short,  all  except  some  of  the  outer  indexed  in  the  bud.  Anthers  minute,  roundish- 
ovate,  opening  by  longitudinal  slits.  Stigma  not  broader  than  the  style.  Fruit 
small.  Capsules  3 to  4-valved,  about  half-exserted. — Placed  under  E.  brachypoda, 
Turcz  in  FI.  Austr.  iii.  223. 

Hab.:  Common  in  western  inland  localities. 

Wood  grey  near  the  outside,  the  rest  all  of  a deep-red  colour  ; useful  in  building  and  cabinet- 
work, although  rather  too  hard  for  the  latter  purpose.— Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  190. 

Small  branches  with  their  leaves  are  placed  in  water  to  poison  fish.  The  inside  bark  is  beaten 
up  and  used  as  a poultice,  heated,  for  snake-bite.  — Palmer. 

31.  E.  miniata  (vermilion),  A.  Cunn.;  Schau.  in  Walp.  Hep.  ii.  925  ; Benth. 
H.  Austr.  iii.  228 ; F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  6.  A moderate-sized  or  large  tree. 
The  branchlets,  flowers,  and  fruit  when  young  covered  with  a whitish  bloom  ; 
the  bark  fibrous  and  persistent  but  readily  separable  in  flakes  (F.  r.  Mueller). 
Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or  lanceolate,  acuminate,  mostly  4 to  Gin.  long,  the  veins 
diverging  and  parallel  but  not  very  close,  the  intramarginal  one  very  near  the 
edge.  Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  very  thick  and  broad,  more  or  less  flattened, 
4 to  lin.  long,  with  about  5 to  7 rather  large  closely  sessile  flowers.  Calyx-tube 
thick,  turbinate  or  almost  urceolate,  about  6 lines  long,  more  or  less  prominently 
8-angled.  Operculum  hemispherical,  obtuse,  thick,  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube. 


624 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


[. Eucalyptus . 


Stamens  richly  coloured,  nearly  4in.  long,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  oblong 
with  distinct  parallel  cells.  Style  nearly  as  long  as  the  stamens;  stigma  not 
dilated.  Ovary  short,  flat-topped.  Fruit  ovoid  or  urceolate,  very  thick  and  hard, 
more  or  less  prominently  ribbed,  1 to  2in.  long,  the  rim  rather  thick,  the  capsule 
deeply  sunk.  Seeds  oblong,  2 to  4 lines  long. — E.  aurantiaca,  F.  v.  M.  in 
Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  91. 

Hab.:  Lynd  River,  Leichhardt  (F.  v.  M.) ; Walsh  River,  T.  Barclay-Millar ; Palmer  River,  T. 
Gulliver.  Flowering  from  May  to  August. 

I may  here  remark  that,  although  Baron  Mueller  states  that  seed  of  this  species  taken  from  his 
herbarium  when  13  years  old  germinated,  I found  seed  to  have  lost  their  germinating  power 
when  only  two  years  old.  The  difference  of  the  Queensland  climate  to  that  of  Victoria  may  in  a 
great  measure  account  for  this,  for  here  seeds  as  a rule  do  not  retain  their  germinating  power 
long. 

32.  £.  robusta  (robust),  Sin.  in  But.  Nor.  Holl.  40  t.  13,  and  in  Trans.  Linn. 

Soc.  iii.  283  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  228  ; F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  7.  “ Gnorpin,” 

Stradbroke  Island,  Watkins.  A moderate-sized  tree,  with  a rough  furrowed  bark. 
Leaves  ovate-lanceolate,  nearly  straight  or  the  upper  ones  narrower  and  falcate, 
4 to  6in.  long  or  sometimes  more,  with  numerous  fine  but  prominent  parallel 
veins  almost  transverse,  the  intramarginal  one  very  near  or  close  to  the  edge. 
Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  stout,  angular  or  flattened,  often  lin.  long,  each 
with  about  4 to  12  rather  large  flowers,  on  thick  angular  pedicels.  Calyx-tube 
narrow-turbinate  or  slightly  urceolate,  3 to  4 lines  long,  tapering  into  the  pedicel. 
Operculum  thick,  obtusely  acuminate,  usually  rather  longer  than  the  calyx-tube. 
Stamens  4 to  6 lines  long,  all  fertile,  indexed  in  the  bud,  somewhat  raised  above 
the  calyx-border  by  the  annular  margin  of  the  disk  ; anthers  ovoid-oblong,  with 
distinct  parallel  cells.  Ovary  flat-topped  or  slightly  conical  in  the  centre.  Fruit 
ovoid-oblong,  truncate,  smooth,  contracted  above  the  middle,  about  |4n.  long  or 
rather  more,  the  rim  thin  and  slightly  prominent,  the  capsule  much  sunk,  valves 
permanently  or  long  coherent,  rather  narrow.  Seeds  small. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Moreton  Bay,  Geo.  Watkins ; Logan  River,  on  swampy  land. 

Gum  contains  29’5%  of  tannin  and  41%  of  arabin. — Lauterer. 

Yield  of  oil  from  dry  foliage,  7oz.  per  cwt. — J.  F.  Bailey. 

Wood  of  a deep-red  colour,  close-grained ; a useful  building  wood. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Hroods 
No.  190a. 

33.  E.  botryoides  (bunch-flowered),  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  286  ; 
Bcntli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  229  ; F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  4 (also  Dec.  6,  under 
E.  punctata,  DC.,  scarcely  differs).  A tall  handsome  tree,  with  a rough  furrowed 
persistent  bark  towards  the  base.  White  and  smooth  on  the  upper  part  of  trunk 
and  branches.  Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or  lanceolate,  acuminate,  straight  or 
rarely  falcate,  4 to  6in.  long  or  sometimes  more,  with  numerous  fine  very 
diverging  parallel  veins,  the  intramarginal  one  very  near  or  close  to  the  edge. 
Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  thick,  angular  or  flat,  bearing  each  about  4 to  10 
rather  large  flowers,  sessile  or  nearly  so.  Calyx-tube  ovoid-turbinate,  2 to  nearly 

3 lines  long.  Operculum  from  very  obtuse  and  much  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube 
to  broadly  conical  and  nearly  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  about  3 lines 
long,  or  rather  more,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  ovoid-oblong,  with  distinct 
parallel  cells.  Ovary  convex  in  the  centre.  Fruit  slightly  angled,  obovoid-oblong, 

4 to  5 lines  long  when  fully  ripe,  somewhat  contracted  at  the  orifice,  the  rim 
narrow,  the  capsule  more  or  less  sunk,  flat  or  slightly  convex  in  the  centre,  3 to 
5-celled,  the  valves  not  protruding. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  219  ; C.  platypodos,  Cav.  Ic. 
iv.  23  t.  341. 

Hab.:  Brisbane;  various  southern  localities,  in  mountain  gullies  and  river  flats  (probably  the 
largest  tree  of  the  Queensland  species). 

Wood  of  a red  colour,  close  in  grain,  hard,  tough  and  durable;  useful  in  large  buildings, 
wheelwright’s  work,  and  in  all  work  where  large  beams  of  hardwood  are  required. — Bailey's  Cat. 
Ql.  Woods  No.  191. 

Yield  of  oil  from  dry  foliage,  Goz.  per  cwt.  - J.  F.  Bailey. 


Eucalyptus.] 


LI.  MYRTACEJE. 


625 


34.  32.  pallidifolia  (leaves  pale),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm-.  iii.  131  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  236.  A small  tree  with  an  ash-coloured  smooth  bark  (F.  v.  Mueller).  Leaves 
ovate-oblong  or  lanceolate,  very  obtuse  and  rarely  3in.  long,  thick  and  smooth, 
the  fine  parallel  very  diverging  veins  scarcely  visible,  the  intramarginal  one  close 
to  the  edge.  Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  short,  nearly  terete,  with  4 to  6 nearly 
sessile  or  shortly  pedicellate  flowers.  Calyx-tube  short,  about  2 lines  diameter. 
Operculum  hemispherical  or  obtusely  conical,  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube. 
Stamens  about  2 lines  long,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  ovate  with  parallel 
distinct  cells.  Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  obovoid-globose,  3 to  4 lines  diameter, 
slightly  contracted  at  the  orifice,  the  rim  broad,  convex,  and  prominent,  the 
capsule  not  sunk,  the  valves  protruding  and  sometimes  acuminate  by  the  persis- 
tent split  base  of  the  style. 

Hab.:  Gulf  country. 

Wood  yellow  near  the  bark,  the  rest  red  ; hard,  close-grained,  and  prettily  mottled. — Bailey's 
Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  190b. 

35.  E.  pachyphylla  (thick  leaf),  F.  r.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  98  and 
Eucalypt.  Dec.  1 ; Benth  FI.  Austr.  iii.  237.  A tall  shrub.  Branchlets  robust, 
not  very  angular.  Leaves  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  abruptly  acuminate,  under 
4in.  long,  very  thick  and  smooth,  the  fine  diverging  parallel  veins  scarcely  con- 
spicuous, intramarginal  one  distant  from  the  edge.  Peduncles  very  short,  bearing 
several  sessile  or  shortly  pedicellate  flowers.  Calyx  with  4 to  7 longitudinal 
angles.  Operculum  semiovate  and  acuminate,  twice  the  length  of  the  tube. 
Stamens  yellow,  inflected  in  the  bud.  Anthers  nearly  ovate,  slits  longitudinal. 
Style  elongated,  stigma  not  dilated.  Fruiting  umbels  nearly  sessile  ; fruits  on 
thick  terete  pedicels,  nearly  hemispherical,  4-ribbed,  very  hard  and  woody,  f to 
lin.  in  diameter,  the  rim  very  broad  and  conically  exserted,  the  capsule  depressed 
below  the  rim,  the  valves  scarcely  protruding.  Seeds  broad  and  flat,  bordered  by 
a narrow  wing. 

Hab.:  Queensland  (without  locality),  F.  v.  Mueller. 

36.  EL  dealbata  (whitened),  A.  Cunn.  Schau.  in  IV alp.  Hep.  ii.  924  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  239.  A small  stunted  tree,  the  foliage  often  glaucous-white,  the 
bark  rugose  or  separating  in  scales,  leaving  the  inner  bark  white  and  smooth  (C. 
Stuart).  Leaves  from  ovate  to  ovate-lanceolate  and  under  4in.  long  or  sometimes 
lanceolate  and  longer,  obtuse  or  acute,  the  veins  oblique  and  irregular,  the  intra 
marginal  one  at  a distance  from  the  edge,  all  usually  conspicuous.  Peduncles 
axillary  or  lateral,  very  short  and  scarcely  flattened,  bearing  each  3 to  6 flowers 
on  short  pedicels.  Calyx-tube  very  open,  about  2 lines  diameter  and  not  so  long. 
Operculum  broad,  rather  thin,  hemispherical  or  conical,  longer  than  the  calyx- 
tube.  Stamens  about  3 lines  long,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  ovate,  with 
parallel  distinct  cells.  Ovary  more  or  less  conical  in  the  centre,  tapering  into  the 
style.  Fruit  almost  hemispherical,  about  3 lines  diameter,  the  rim  flat,  the  valves 
protruding  even  before  they  open. 

Hab.:  Stanthorpe;  in  the  interior,  Mitchell. 

Wood  of  a pinkish  colour,  only  fit  for  being  used  in  the  whole  log,  as  it  is  apt  to  split  and  is 
usually  full  of  hollows  containing  gum.  The  wood  of  this  and  similar  Eucalypts  is  very 
durable  when  used  for  underground  work. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  191. 

37.  £.  rostrata  (operculum  beaked),  Schlecht.  Linneea,  xx.  655  ; Benth.  FI. 

Austr.  iii.  240;  F.  r.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  4.  “ Yarra,”  Moonie  River,  Sir  T. 

Mitchell.  A tall  tree  with  a greyish-white  bark,  smooth  and  separating  in  thin 
layers  (F.  r.  Mueller  and  others)  rarely  persistent  and  rough  ? (F.  r.  Mueller). 
Leaves  lanceolate,  mostly  falcate  and  acuminate,  8 to  6in.  long  or  even  more,  the 
lower  ones  sometimes  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate  and  straight,  not  thick,  the  veins 
rather  regular,  numerous  and  oblique,  the  intramarginal  one  not  close  to  the 
edge,  or  in  some  desert  specimens  thick  with  the  veins  much  less  conspicuous. 


626 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


[Eucalyptus. 


Peduncles  rather  short,  terete  or  scarcely  compressed,  bearing  each  about  4 to  8 
flowers  on  rather  long  pedicels.  Calyx-tube  hemispherical,  2 to  2J  lines 
diameter.  Operculum  almost  hemispherical  at  the  base  and  about  as  long 
as  or  shorter  than  the  calyx  without  the  point  or  beak,  which  is  almost 
always  prominent  and  sometimes  rather  long,  or  very  rarely  the  whole  oper- 
culum is  elongated  and  obtuse  without  any  beak,  much  shorter  than  in 
E.  tereticomis.  Stamens  about  2 lines  long,  inflected  in  the  bud ; anthers  small, 
ovate,  with  parallel  distinct  cells.  Ovary  short,  convex  or  conical  in  the  centre. 
Fruit  nearly  globular,  rarely  above  3 lines  diameter,  the  rim  broad  and  very 
prominent,  almost  conical,  the  capsule  not  sunk  and  the  valves  entirely  pro- 
truding even  before  they  open.— F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  83  ; E.  lonyi- 
rostris,  F.  v.  M.;  Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  125. 

Hab.:  Borders  of  many  inland  rivers.  In  Queensland,  so  far  as  I have  observed,  never  a 
tall  tree. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  close-grained,  strong  and  durable  if  kept  dry. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql. 
Woods  No.  192. 

38.  £.  exserta  (the  wholly  exserted  valves),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc. 
iii.  85;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  241.  A moderate-sized  or  small  tree,  the  bark  ash- 
brown,  rough  and  fissured  outside  and  falling  in  fragments,  somewhat  fibrous 
inside  (F.  v.  Mueller).  Leaves  lanceolate,  mostly  falcate  and  acuminate,  3 to  6in. 
long  or  sometimes  much  more,  the  lower  ones  often  ovate,  rather  thick,  the  veins 
rather  regular,  numerous  and  oblique,  the  intramarginal  one  not  close  to  the 
edge.  Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  terete  or  scarcely  compressed,  bearing  each 
3 to  8 flowers  on  distinct  often  rather  long  pedicels.  Calyx-tube  hemispherical, 
about  2 lines  diameter  (or  sometimes  nearly  3 ?).  Operculum  hemispherical  or 
broadly  conical,  more  or  less  beaked,  acuminate  and  rather  longer  than  the  calyx- 
tube.  Stamens  about  2 lines  long  or  rather  more,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers 
ovate  with  parallel  distinct  cells.  Fruit  nearly  globular,  3 to  4 lines  diameter, 
the  rim  broad  and  very  prominent,  almost  conical,  the  capsule  not  sunk,  and  the 
valves  entirely  protruding  even  before  they  open. 

Hab.:  From  the  Burnett  to  the  Gilbert  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

Wood  of  a pinkish  colour,  hard,  tough  and  durable. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  192a. 

39.  E.  tereticomis  (horn-like  operculum),  Stn.  Iiot.  Nor.  Moll.  41,  and  in 
Tram.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  284  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  241  ; F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt,  Dec.  9. 
Blue  Gum.  “ Yarah,”  Bundaberg,  Keys:  “ Mungar,”  Brisbane,  T.  Petrie; 
“ Moonburrie,”  Nanango,  Shirley;  “ Dandoola,”  Mackay,  Nuyent.  A tall 
tree,  with  a smooth  whitish  or  ash-coloured  bark  shedding  in  thin 
layers.  Leaves  lanceolate,  mostly  falcate  and  acuminate,  often  exceeding 
6in.  long,  the  veins  rather  regular  and  numerous  and  oblique  as  in  F. 
rostrata,  but  often  rather  coarser,  the  intramarginal  one  rather  distant 
from  the  edge.  Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  not  very  short,  terete  or 
angular,  the  upper  ones  sometimes  forming  a short  panicle,  each  bearing  about  4 
to  8 flowers  on  pedicels  of  1 to  3 lines.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  2 to  nearly  3 lines 
diameter.  Operculum  conical,  acuminate,  usually  about  Jin.  long,  always  much 
longer  than  the  calyx-tube  and  usually  broader,  of  a rather  thin  texture  and 
smooth.  Stamens  often  Jin.  long,  more  or  less  inflected  in  the  bud,  but  some- 
times only  very  shortly  so  at  the  ends  ; anthers  small,  ovate,  with  parallel  distinct 
cells.  Ovary  nearly  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube  and  convex  or  conical  in  the  centre. 
Fruit  obovoid  or  almost  globular,  3 to  4 lines  diameter,  the  rim  broad  and  very 
prominent,  the  capsule  not  sunk,  the  valves  protruding  beyond  the  rim. — DC. 
Prod.  iii.  216;  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  83,  and  Fragm.  ii.  65  ; Lepto- 
spernnun  umhellatum,  Gfertn.  Fruct.  i.  174  t.  35  ; E.  subulata,  A.  Cunn.;  Schau. 
iu  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  924. 


Pl.  XXII. 


Euxi&ZypJj^s  pXcdypTzylicL/,  F.v.JF. 

F C.  Wills 


Eucalyptus.] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


627 


Hab.:  Bay  of  Inlets,  Banks  and  Solander ; Broadsound,  Shoalwater,  and  Keppel  Bay,  B. 
Brown  ; Percy  Island,  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham  ; Port  Denison,  Fitzalan, 
Dallachy ; Rockingham  Bay  (“Red  Gum”  and  “Blue  Gum”),  Dallachy. 

Wood  of  a red  colour,  hence  sometimes  called  Red  Gum.  Generally  known  as  Blue  Gum, 
from  at  times  having  a bluish  bark.  Grain  close  ; a tough  and  durable  wood,  used  in  house- 
building and  for  many  other  purposes. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods.  No.  193. 

Gum  contains  62%  of  tannin. — Lauterer. 

Yield  of  oil  from  dry  foliage,  28oz.  per  cwt. — T.  F.  Bailey. 

Var.  brachycorys.  Operculum  more  obtuse,  3 to  4 lines  long. — A few  localities  in  south 
Queensland.  To  this  also  probably  belong  the  Mitchell  River  specimens,  in  which,  however,  the 
buds  are  not  full  grown. 

The  common  form  with  a long  operculum,  when  in  very  young  bud,  requires  some  caution  in 
distinguishing  it  from  the  rostrate  varieties  of  K.  siderophloia  and  K.  resinifera.  The  venation 
of  the  leaf  is  then  the  best  guide. — Benth. 

40.  E.  platyphylla  (broad-leaved),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  93  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  242.  Broad-leaved  Poplar  Gum.  “ Wongoola,” 
Mackay.  Nugent.  A handsome  tree,  with  a light-green  foliage-  and  smooth 
white  deciduous  bark.  Leaves  deciduous,  ovate  or  rhomboid,  acuminate 
or  obtuse,  the  larger  ones  sometimes  8 to  lOin.  long  and  broad  and 
almost  cordate,  but  mostly  much  smaller  and  sometimes  passing  into  ovate- 
lanceolate,  rather  rigid,  the  veins  prominent,  diverging,  and  anastomosing. 
Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  very  short  and  rather  thick,  each  with  3 to  6 or 
rarely  more  flowers  on  short  thick  angular  pedicels.  Calyx-tube  turbinate  or 
nearly  hemispherical,  about  3 lines  diameter,  the  margin  prominent  in  the  bud 
after  the  outer  operculum  has  fallen.  Operculum  not  thick,  hemispherical, 
shorter  than  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  3 to  4 lines  long,  all  perfect,  inflected  in 
the  bud  ; anthers  oblong,  with  parallel  distinct  cells.  Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit 
obconical,  4 to  5 lines  diameter,  not  contracted  at  the  orifice,  the  rim  thick, 
convex  and  prominent,  the  capsule  nearly  on  a level  with  it,  and  the  valves 
shortly  protruding. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  Shoalwater  Bay,  R.  Brown;  fertile 
pastures  on  the  Burdekin,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Percy  Island,  A.  Cunningham ; Endeavour  River,  W. 
Hill;  common  about  Rockhampton,  Dallachy  ; Broadsound,  Fitzroy ; Bowen  River,  Bowman. 

41.  E.  alba  (white),  Reinw.  in  Blurne,  Bijdr.  1101  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
243  ; F.  r.  M.  Fucalypt.  Dec.  4.  A tall  tree  with  a pale  ash-coloured  rough 
persistent  bark  (F.  r.  Mueller),  the  foliage  of  a pale  glaucous  hue.  Leaves  from 
ovate-oblong  and  2 to  3in.  long,  to  ovate-lanceolate  or  broadly  lanceolate,  obtuse 
or  scarcely  acuminate  and  5 to  Bin.  long,  with  diverging  veins  and  very  much 
reticulate,  the  intramarginal  vein  very  near  the  edge.  Peduncles  axillary,  terete 
or  nearly  so,  short,  with  few  pedicellate  flowers,  not  seen  expanded.  Buds  small, 
ovoid,  the  operculum  obtusely  conical,  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Fruit  turbinate 
or  obconical,  about  3 lines  diameter,  the  rim  somewhat  convex  and  rather  broad, 
the  capsule  slightly  depressed,  the  valves  exserted. — Dene.  Herb.  Tim.  Descr. 
126  ; FI.  tectifica,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  92. 

Hab.:  Recorded  for  Queensland  by  F.  v.  Mueller ; Bandin’ s Expedition  (Herb.  R.  Brown, 
from  Herb.  Mus.  Par.  marked  “Cote  occidentale,”  but  as  in  other  plants  from  the  same 
expedition  probably  in  error) ; grassy  valleys,  Macarthur  River,  Gulf  of  Carpentaria.  The 
Timor  specimens  from  the  Herb.  Mus.  Par.  in  Herb.  R.  Brown  are  in  the  same  state  of 
fruit  only  as  Baudin’s  Australian  one,  so  also  is  a Timor  specimen  of  Zippelius’s,  communicated 
by  Miquel  to  the  Hookerian  Herbarium.  The  E.  moluccana,  Roxb.  FI.  Ind.  ii.  498,  referred  here 
by  Miquel,  FI.  Ind.  Bat.  i.  part  i.  398,  must,  from  Roxburgh’s  short  description,  be  very  different. 
No  specimens  of  it  have  been  transmitted,  and  the  tree  is  probably  lost  from  the  Calcutta 
Gardens.  That  was  probably  the  best  evidence  as  yet  obtained  of  the  genus  existing  in  the 
Indian  Archipelago  beyond  Timor,  for  E.  deglupta  is  described  by  Blume,  and  E.  multiflora  by 
A.  Gray,  from  specimens  without  flowers  or  fruit,  and  the  others  are  only  taken  up  from 
Rumphius’s  very  incomplete  descriptions  and  figures  of  the  trunk  and  foliage,  also  without 
flowers  or  fruit,  —Bevtli, 


628 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


[Eucalyptus. 


Mitchell’s  specimens,  referred  by  Black  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  02,  to  E.  tectifica , belong  to 
E.  dealbata,  the  leaves  of  which  sometimes  assume  the  form  of  those  of  E.  alba,  but  with  a 
different  venation. — Bentii. 

I give  this  species  because  I think  it  probable  that  some  of  the  specimens  from  the  more 
northern  localities,  and  which  have  been  placed  under  E.  platypliylla,  F.  v.  M.,  belong  rather  to 
E.  alba,  lleinw.;  thus  Bentham’s  description  and  notes  are  given  in  full  from  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
Mueller,  Eucalypt.  Dec.  4,  seems  inclined  to  merge  E.  platypliylla  in  the  older  species,  E.  alba. 

42.  E.  Stuartiana  (after  C.  Stuart),  F.  r.  M.;  Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch. 
iv.  181  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  248  ; F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  4.  A tree  attaining 
a considerable  elevation,  the  bark  of  the  branches  smooth  and  deciduous,  that  of 
the  trunk  rough  and  rigid  and  somewhat  stringy  (F.  v.  Mueller,  Oldfield).  Leaves 
from  broadly  ovate-lanceolate  to  narrow  lanceolate,  mostly  3 to  Gin.  long,  much 
narrowed  at  the  base,  usually  equal  or  nearly  so,  but  sometimes  oblique,  thick, 
the  nerves  rather  regular  and  diverging  but  scarcely  conspicuous.  Peduncles 
axillary  or  lateral,  terete  or  slightly  angular,  with  about  4 to  8 flowers  on  rather 
short  thick  pedicels.  Calyx-tube  smooth,  often  shining,  turbinate,  about  2 lines 
diameter,  the  border  usually  prominent  in  the  bud.  Operculum  conical,  some- 
times acuminate,  from  rather  shorter  to  rather  longer  than  the  calyx-tube. 
Stamens  dark-coloured,  2 to  nearly  3 lines  long,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers 
ovate-oblong,  with  parallel  distinct  cells.  Ovary  short,  flat-topped.  Fruit  almost 
turbinate,  usually  about  3 lines  but  varying  from  2 to  4 lines  diameter,  not  con- 
tracted at  the  orifice,  the  rim  not  thick,  slightly  prominent,  the  capsule  level  with 
it  or  slightly  sunk,  the  valves  horizontal  or  protruding  when  open. — F.  acervula, 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  135,  not  of  Sieb.;  FI.  Gunnii , F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  62,  not  of 
Hook.;  E.  persicifolia,  Miq.  in  Ned.  Kruidk.  Arch.  iv.  137,  not  of  Lodd.;  K. 
Baueriana,  Miq.  l.c.,  not  of  Schauer  ; F.  faleifolia,  Miq.  l.c.  136  (one  specimen). 

Hab.:  Stanthorpe. 

Wood  of  a grey  colour,  hard,  tough  and  durable. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  191b. 

43.  E.  saligna  (willow-leaved),  Sin.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  285  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  245  ; F.  r.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec..  2.  A tall  tree  with  a smooth  silver- 
grey  shining  bark,  shedding  in  thin  longitudinal  thick  strips.  Leaves  from 
ovate-lanceolate  to  long-lanceolate,  but  usually  narrow,  acuminate,  4 to  6in.  long, 
with  very  numerous  fine  close  transverse  parallel  veins,  the  intramarginal  one 
close  to  the  edge.  Peduncles  short,  mostly  flattened,  each  with  4 to  8 flowers. 
Calyx-tube  narrow-turbinate,  2 to  nearly  3 lines  long,  sessile  or  tapering  into  a 
short  thick  pedicel,  the  border  of  the  calyx  prominent  in  the  bud  and  the  orifice 
usually  expanding  after  flowering.  Operculum  conical,  about  as  long  as  the 
calyx-tube.  Stamens  2 to  3 lines  long,  inflected  in  the  bud,  anthers  ovate,  with 
distinct  parallel  cells.  Ovary  conical  in  the  centre.  Fruit  subglobose-truncate, 
not  contracted  at  the  orifice,  the  rim  narrow,  slightly  raised  above  the  calyx- 
border,  the  capsule  somewhat  or  scarcely  sunk,  the  valves  more  or  less  protruding. 
— DC.  Prod.  iii.  218. 

Hab.:  Forests  in  southern  parts. 

Wood  very  tough  and  close-grained ; very  hard ; of  a grey  colour. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods 
No  .195. 

Gum  contains  28  4%  of  tannin  and  42%  of  arabin. — Lauterer. 

Yield  of  oil  from  dry  foliage,  18oz.  per  cwt. — J.  F.  Bailey. 

41.  E.  resinifera  (resin-bearing),  Sm.  in  White  Toy.  231,  in  Trans.  Linn. 
Soc.  iii.  284,  and  E.vot.  Bot.  t.  84  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  215  ; F.  r.  M.  Eucalypt. 
Dec.  1.  Jimmy  Low  (Maroochie),  Forest  Mahogany,  Red  Stringy  Bark. 
“ Roangga,”  Palmer  River,  Roth.  A tall  tree  with  a rough  persistent  bark  on 
the  trunk  but  more  or  less  deciduous  on  the  branches.  Leaves  ovate- 
lanceolate  to  lanceolate,  acuminate,  straight  or  falcate,  mostly  4 to  Gin. 
long,  rather  thick,  with  numerous  fine  close  parallel  and  almost  transverse 
veins,  sometimes  scarcely  conspicuous,  the  intramarginal  one  close  to  the  edge. 


Eucalyptus.'] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


629 


Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  more  or  less  flattened,  each  Avith  about  6 to  8 or 
sometimes  more  floAvers  on  pedicels  usually  short  but  sometimes  longer  than  the 
calyx-tube.  Calyx-tube  broadly  turbinate,  2J  to  8 or  rarely  4 lines  diameter. 
Operculum  conical  or  acuminate,  much  longer  than  the  calyx-tube  and  often 
broader  at  the  base  as  in  77.  tereticornis.  Stamens  4 to  6 lines  long,  raised  above 
the  calyx-border  by  the  disk,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  small,  ovate,  Avith 
parallel  distinct  cells.  Ovary  not  much  shorter  than  the  calyx,  conical  in  the 
centre.  Fruit  obconical,  subglobose-truncate  or  almost  hemispherical,  not  con- 
tracted at  the  orifice,  the  rim  not  broad,  convex  or  prominent,  the  capsule  some- 
Avhat  sunk  or  nearly  level  Avith  it,  the  valves  protruding.  --DC.  Prod.  iii.  216. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallachy ; Daintree  River,  E.  Fitzalan ; valleys  of  the  Upper 
Brisbane  (with  a very  long  operculum),  F.  v.  Mueller ; head  of  the  Cape,  Bowman;  many  parts 
of  southern  Queensland,  particularly  along  the  North  Coast  Railway  about  Maroochie. 

This  species  is  allied  in  the  fruit  and  foliage  to  E.  saligna,  differing  chiefly  in  the  pedicellate 
flowers  and  large  operculum,  and  in  the  fruit  to  E.  Stuartiana,  from  which  it  is  readily 
distinguished  by  the  venation  of  the  leaves  as  well  as  by  the  operculum.  When  the  operculum 
is  long,  the  buds  resemble  those  of  E.  siderophloia,  var.  rostrata,  and  of  E.  tereticornis,  but  the 
venation  of  the  foliage  and  other  characters  are  quite  different.  It  varies  much  in  the  size  of 
the  flowers,  the  length  of  the  pedicel,  and  in  the  operculum  from  under  tAvice  to  four  times  the 
length  of  the  calyx-tube.  Smith’s  specimen  is  a garden  one,  Avith  the  operculum  about  tAvice 
the  calyx-tube,  but  a native  one  in  the  Banksian  herbarium,  probably  seen  by  Smith,  has  it 
three  times  the  calyx-tube.  Geertner’s  figure  and  description  of  the  fruit  of  Metrosideros 
gummifera,  quoted  by  Smith  as  belonging  to  E.  resinifera,  and  Avhieh  has  thus  prevented  the 
recognising  the  species,  Avas  taken  from  a specimen  in  the  Banksian  herbarium  of  E.  corymbosa. — 
Benth. 

Gum  contains  48-4%  of  arabin  and  26%  of  tannic  acid. — Lauterer. 

Bark  used  for  basket-troughs,  &c.,  and  for  poisoning  Avater  for  fish.—  Roth,  l.c. 

Wood  of  a rich  red  colour,  from  Avhieh  it  has  been  called  Mahogany  ; strong  and  durable. 
Most  useful  for  piles,  fencing-posts,  and  the  large  beams  in  buildings. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  If 'oods 
No.  196. 

Var.  grandiflora.  Buds  ovoid,  about  4 lines  diameter,  the  operculum  broad  and  thick  at  the 
base,  Avith  a rather  long  beak  or  gradually  tapering.  Fruit  about  4 to  6 lines  diameter,  Avith  a 
raised  rim  and  exserted  valves. — Andr.  Bot.  Rep.  t.  400 ; E.  hemilampra,  F.  v.  M.  Herb, 

45.  E.  pellita  (skin-bearing),  F.  v.  M.  Fraym.  iv.  159  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  246.  A tree  of  40  to  50ft.,  Avith  a rough  dark-grey  bark  (Dallachy). 
Leat'es  ovate-lanceolate  or  almost  ovate,  acuminate,  nearly  straight,  5 to  6in.  long 
or  more,  rigid,  with  numerous  parallel  almost  trans\Terse  veins,  the  intramarginal 
one  near  the  edge.  Peduncles  axillary  or  lateral,  stout  and  much  flattened,  often 
lin.  long,  each  Avith  about  4 to  8 rather  large  flowers  on  thick  angular  pedicels 
often  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube.  Calyx-tube  much  broader  and  shorter  than  in  F. 
botryoides,  5 to  nearly  6 lines  diameter  and  more  or  less  angular.  Operculum 
thick,  hemispherical,  broader  than  the  calyx-tube,  Avith  a short  obtuse  beak. 
Stamens  about  Jin.  long,  somewhat  raised  above  the  calyx-border  by  the  disk, 
infected  in  the  bud ; anthers  ovate-oblong,  with  parallel  distinct  cells.  0\'ary 
very  conical  in  the  centre.  Fruit  subglobose-truncate  or  nearly  hemispherical,  6 
to  8 lines  diameter,  not  contracted  at  the  orifice,  the  rim  raised  above  the  calyx- 
border,  slightly  convex  and  rather  broad,  the  capsule  scarcely  sunk,  the  valves 
much  projecting. — 77.  speetabilis,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  45. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy. 

The  species,  as  observed  by  F.  v.  Mueller,  resembles  E.  botryoides,  but  differs  in  the  larger 
especially  broader  floAvers,  in  the  conical  ovary,  and  in  the  shape  of  the  fruit.  It  is,  hoAvever, 
very  closely  allied  to  E.  snligna  ami  E.  resinifera,  differing  chiefly  in  the  size  of  its  leaves, 
floAvers,  and  fruit,  and  should  perhaps  include  the  var.  grandiflora,  Avhieh  I have  referred  to  the 
latter. — Benth. 

In  the  Eucalyptographia,  Dec.  1,  F.  v.  M.  merges  this  species  into  E.  resinifera  ; but  if  this  is 
done  it  would  have  to  be  given  as  a variety,  therefore  it  may  as  Avell  be  left  as  given  in  the 
FI.  Austr.  l.c. 

46.  E.  grandifolia  (large-leaved),  R.  Br.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  250. 
A small  tree,  with  the  outer  bark  brown  and  deciduous,  the  inner  whitish  and 
very  smooth  (7?.  Brown).  Leaves  opposite  or  nearly  so,  petiolate,  from  ovate  to 


030 


LI.  MYRTACE.E. 


[Eucalyptus . 


ovate-lanceolate,  4 to  6in.  long  in  the  specimens,  but  probably  often  larger,  rigid, 
with  rather  fine  diverging  veins,  the  intramarginal  one  remote  from  the  edge. 
Flowers  rather  large,  on  pedicels  of  4 to  fin.,  3 to  10  together,  rather  clustered 
than  umbellate  on  a very  short  lateral  peduncle,  reduced  sometimes  to  a tubercle 
(probably  the  inflorescence  consists  of  several  umbels  reduced  to  1 or  2 flowers 
each).  Calyx-tube  very  short,  broad,  and  open,  4 to  nearly  5 lines  diameter. 
Operculum  convex  or  almost  hemispherical,  obtuse  or  umbonate,  much  shorter 
than  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  4 to  5 lines  long  or  rather  more,  inflected  in  the 
bud ; anthers  oblong,  with  parallel  distinct  cells.  Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit 
unknown. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  It.  Brown  (Herb.  11.  Brown). — Benth. 


47.  E.  clavigera  (buds  club-shaped),  A.  Cunn.  in  Walp.  Hep.  ii.  926  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  250  ; F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec  4.  A large  shrub  or  small 
tree  (/?.  Brown)  with  an  ash-coloured  bark.  Leaves  from  opposite,  sessile 
or  nearly  so,  and  broadly  ovate-cordate  or  almost  orbicular,  to  alternate 
and  broadly  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  rarely  above  4in.  long,  rather  rigid, 
the  veins  prominent,  diverging  or  almost  transverse,  but  not  close.  Peduncles 
short,  two  or  more  together  on  a short  leafless  branch  forming  lateral 
clusters  or  very  short  panicles,  each  peduncle  bearing  an  umbel  of  several 
rather  small  flowers  on  slender  pedicels  often  £in.  long.  Calyx-tube 
turbinate,  about  2 lines  long  and  as  much  in  diameter.  Operculum  very  flat  or 
convex,  rarely  almost  hemispherical  but  much  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube. 
Stamens  about  3 lines  long,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  ovate  or  oblong,  with 
parallel  distinct  cells.  Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  from  nearly  globular  to  ovoid- 
oblong,  4 to  5 lines  long,  more  or  less  contracted  at  the  orifice,  the  rim  thin,  the 
capsule  deeply  suuk. — E.  polysciadia,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  98. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  It.  Brown. 

Wood  of  a dark-brown  colour,  close  in  grain,  hard  and  durable. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  I Foods 
No.  196a. 


48.  E.  tesselaris  (the  lower  bark  of  stem  broken  into  small  squares), 
F.  r.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  88  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  251  ; F.  v.  M. 
Eucalypt.  Dec.  9.  “ Carbeen,”  and  “ Ori,”  St.  George,  Wedd;  “ Woonara,” 

Nanango,  Shirley;  “ Urrgula,”  Palmer  River,  Roth;  “ Tchunba,”  Bundaberg, 
Keys ; “ Wonkara,”  Port  Curtis ; “ Algoori,”  Mackay,  Nugent.  A middle- 
sized  or  large  tree,  the  bark  dark-brown,  smooth  and  deciduous,  the 
inner  whitish  and  very  smooth  (R.  Brown),  the  bark  persistent  on  the 
trunk,  dull  ash-coloured,  marked  with  longitudinal  and  transverse  furrows 
forming  separable  pieces  (F.  v.  Mueller),  casts  its  bark  in  small  angular  pieces 
(Mitchell).  Leaves  lanceolate  to  almost  linear,  straight  or  falcate,  3 to  Gin.  long, 
with  numerous  fine  parallel  diverging  or  almost  transverse  veins  and  more  or  less 
reticulate,  the  intramarginal  vein  close  to  the  edge.  Peduncles  very  short,  usually 
several  together  in  lateral  clusters  or  very  short  panicles,  often  so  reduced  as  to 
appear  like  a single  compact  irregular  umbel,  each  peduncle  with  3 to  6 (or  when 
the  inflorescence  is  compact  1 of  2)  flowers  on  short  or  slender  pedicels.  Calyx- 
tube  short,  much  widened  above  the  ovary,  2 to  24  or  rarely  nearly  3 lines 
diameter.  Operculum  very  short  and  only  slightly  convex.  Stamens  2 to  3 lines 
long,  inflected  in  the  bud  ; anthers  ovate-oblong,  with  parallel  distinct  cells. 
Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  ovoid  or  oblong,  3 to  4 lines  long,  slightly  contracted  at 
the  orifice,  the  rim  thin,  the  capsule  deeply  sunk. — F.  viminalis,  Hook,  in  Mitch. 
Trop.  Austr.  157,  not  of  Labill.;  E.  Hookeri,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc. 
iii.  90. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  B.  Brown  : Brisbane  River  and  many  other  southern 
localities;  Fitzroy  Downs,  Mitchell;  Port  Denison,  FiUalan. 


Eucalyptus.] 


LI.  MYRTACEzE. 


631 


Wood  of  a dark-brown  colour,  except  near  the  bark;  close-grained,  tough  and  durable, 
especially  that  of  the  northern  trees. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  11)7. 

Gum  contains  52-3%  of  tannin. — Lauterer. 

Bark  boiled  in  water;  drunk  for  dysentery. — Both  l.c. 

Var.  Dallachiana.  Veins  of  the  leaves  more  oblique,  the  intramarginal  one  not  so  close  to  the 
edge,  the  cluster  of  umbels  so  dense  as  to  be  reduced  .almost  to  a sessile  head. — Rockhampton, 
Dallachy  (F.  v.  M.) — Wood  brownish,  tough,  and  close-grained.  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  198. 

49.  H.  phcenicea  (referring  to  its  fiery  crimson  flowers),  F.  r.  M.  iti  Journ. 
Linn.  Soc.  iii.  91  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  251  ; F.  v.  M.  Fucalypt.  Dec.  1.  A 
middle-sized  or  small  tree,  the  bark  persistent  or  tardily  falling  off  from  the 
upper  branches  and  readily  separable  in  flakes,  the  outside  of  a yellowish  or 
greyish-brown,  when  freshly  broken  glittering  somewhat  like  mica-schist. 
Leaves  lanceolate,  4 to  Gin.  long,  or  even  more,  with  fine  diverging  veins, 
numerous  but  somewhat  reticulate,  the  intramarginal  one  close  to  the  edge. 
Peduncles  lateral,  terete  or  nearly  so,  bearing  each  a dense  umbel  of  numerous 
large  flowers  remarkable  for  their  long  narrow  shape.  Pedicels  2 to  3 lines  long. 
Calyx-tube  5 to  6 lines  long,  obscurely  ribbed,  about  3 lines  diameter  at  the 
orifice  and  tapering  downwards.  Operculum  hemispherical  or  conical,  shorter 
than  broad  and  much  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube.  Stamens  about  6 lines  long, 
almost  a fiery-crimson  or  orange-scarlet,  much  inflected  in  the  bud ; anthers 
ovate,  with  parallel  distinct  cells.  Ovary  in  the  flower  2-celled.  Fruit  urceolate- 
oblong,  f to  lin.  long,  crowned  by  a narrow  neck  of  about  2 or  3 lines,  with  a 
thin  rim,  the  capsule  sunk  to  the  base  of  the  neck. 

Hab.:  When  collecting  the  wood  exhibit  for  the  Colonial  and  Indian  Exhibition  in  1886,  I 
received  a log  and  some  fragmentary  specimens  of  a Eucalypt  from  Gulf  country,  which  I con- 
sidered probably  a form  of  the  above  species  with  whitish  flowers.  The  wood  was  grey  for  a 
good  distance  in,  but  the  centre  was  of  a dark-brown,  tough  and  heavy  (s ee  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql. 
Woods  No  196b). 

50.  E.  setosa  (bristly),  Schau.  in  IV alp.  Iiep.  ii.  926  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
254  ; F.  v.  M.  Eucahjpt.  Dec.  6.  A small  or  moderate-sized  tree,  with  a smooth 
ash-grey  bark  ( R . Brown),  (stringy  according  to  E.  Fitzalan),  the  branchlets  and 
inflorescence  more  or  less  hispid  with  rust-coloured  bristles.  Leaves  opposite, 
sessile,  cordate  orbicular  and  obtuse  or  ovate  and  almost  acute,  rarely  above  2in. 
long.  Umbels  shortly  pedunculate,  several-flowered,  forming  short,  terminal, 
rather  loose  corymbose  panicles.  Pedicels  often  longer  than  the  calyx.  Calyx- 
tube  obovoid,  often  slightly  8-ribbed,  about  3 lines  long,  more  or  less  covered  with 
bristles.  Operculum  conical,  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube,  often  bearing  a few 
bristles.  Anthers  ovate,  parallel-celled.  Ovary  flat- topped,  the  style  not  dilated. 
Fruit  urceolate-globular,  much  contracted  at  the  top,  hard  and  woody,  | to  fin. 
diameter,  the  rim  narrow,  the  capsule  sunk.  Perfect  seeds  large,  broadly  winged. 
— F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  132. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  Sweers  Island,  Henne ; Mount  Elliott, 
Fitzalan , Dallachy  (with  fewer  setae  on  the  buds). 

Wood  of  a dark-brownish  colour,  subject  to  gum-veins,  therefore  only  fit  for  using  in  the  whole 
log;  hard,  strong  and  durable. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql  Woods  No.  198a. 

51.  E.  Torelliana  (after  L.  de  Torelli),  Ft  v.  M.  Fragm.  x.  106.  A tall 
tree  with  smooth  bark.  Branchlets  moderately  stout,  and  as  well  as  the  petioles 
hispidulous-scabrous.  Leaves  from  chartaceous  tr  coriaceous,  2 to  3in.  long, 
1£  to  2 in.  broad,  broad  or  cordate-ovate,  the  ur  d r side  pale,  the  intramarginal 
vein  distant-from  the  edge  ; petioles  about  |in.  long.  Panicles  terminal,  flowers 
numerous,  glabrous,  branches  spreading,  pedicels  very  short.  Calyx-tube 
campanulately  semiovate.  Operculum  shining,  smooth,  scarcely  exceeding  2 
lines  broad.  Stamens  indexed  in  the  bud.  Anthers  oblong,  stigma  not  dilated. 
Ovary  3-celled. 

Hab.:  Near  Cairns. 


Part  it.  x 


082 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


[Eucalyptus. 


52.  E.  peltata  (lamina  attached  to  the  petiole  within  the  margin),  Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  254;  F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt.  Per.  6.  A tree  with  a dark  shining  brittle 
and  flaky  but  persistent  bark  of  a somewhat  weeping  habit.  Leaves  from  nearly 
orbicular  to  oblong-ovate,  obtuse,  rather  large,  peltately  inserted  on  the  petiole 
above  their  base,  rusty-scabrous  or  glabrous  and  somewhat  glaucous,  with 
diverging  but  not  close  veins.  Flowers  rather  large,  nearly  sessile  in  the  umbels, 
which  are  arranged  in  oblong  (or  corymbose  ?)  terminal  panicles,  but  not  seen 
expanded.  Calyx-tube  obconical  in  the  bud,  about  8 lines  long,  smooth  and 
shining.  Operculum  much  shorter,  obtusely  conical  or  hemispherical.  Anthers 
ovate-oblong,  with  parallel  cells.  Fruit  urceolate-globose,  about  4 lines  diameter, 
contracted  above  the  deeply  sunk  capsule,  the  rim  tlnn.  Seeds  smooth  and  not 
winged  according  to  F.  v.  Mueller,  but  not  seen  in  a ripe  state. — E.  melissiodora, 
F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  95,  not  of  Lindl. 

Hab.:  Burdekin,  Lynd,  and  Gilbert  Rivers;  Charters  Towers,  Ravenswood. 

Wood  valued  by  artisans  for  various  purposes. — F.  r.  M.  1 r. 

58.  E.  latifolia  (leaves  broad),  F.  r.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  94  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  254.  A small  or  middle-sized  tree,  with  a smooth  ash-grey  bark, 
tardily  separating  from  the  inner  brownish  bark  also  smooth  ( F . v.  Mueller). 
Leaves  alternate  or  here  and  there  almost  opposite,  petiolate,  ovate,  obtuse,  with 
transverse  parallel  veins,  rather  more  prominent  and  not  so  close  as  in  the  allied 
narrow-leaved  species.  Flowers  rather  large,  4 to  6 in  each  umbel,  in  a large 
terminal  corymbose  panicle.  Peduncles  terete  ; pedicels  terete,  shorter  than  the 
calyx-tube.  Calyx-tube  broadly  turbinate,  4 to  5 lines  diameter,  rather  thick. 
Operculum  very  short,  slightly  convex.  Anthers  ovate-oblong,  with  parallel 
distinct  cells.  Fruits  globose-truncate  or  urceolate-globose  with  a very  short 
neck,  smooth  and  not  ribbed,  3 to  4 lines  diameter,  the  rim  thin  ; the  capsule 
deeply  sunk.  Seeds. winged. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria. 

54.  E.  Albergiana  (after  Ernest  Alberg),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  xi.  43  ami 
Eucalypt.  Dec.  1.  A lofty  tree  with  persistent  bark  and  very  spreading  branches, 
the  branchlets  sometimes  slender  and  somewhat  angular,  at  other  times  thick  and 
cylindrical.  Leaves  oval  or  elongate-lanceolate,  24  to  4in.  long,  1 to  2in.  broad. 
Petioles  about  lin.  long.  Panicles  thick,  terminal,  almost  corymbose,  the 
ultimate  branches  bearing  2 to  6 sessile  flowers  ; flower-buds  oval.  Operculum 
hemispherical.  Stamens  all  or  nearly  all  fertile,  indexed  in  the  bud,  the  longer 
filaments  from  4 to  6 lines  long  ; anthers  oval,  scarcely  \ line  long.  Style  half 
included  within  the  calyx,  shorter  than  the  stamens.  Fruit  lin.  long,  urceolate, 
smooth,  valves  4,  seeds  winged,  with  the  wing  4 lines  long. 

Hab.:  Near  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallacliy. 

The  heartwopd  very  hard,  reddish. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

55.  E.  corymbosa  (flowers  in  corymbs),  Sm . Bot.  Nov . Floll.  43,  and  in 
Trans.  Linn.  Joe.  iii.  287  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  256  ; F.  v.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  5. 
Bloodwood.  “Ambool,”  St.  George,  Wedd:  “Gooden,”  Nanango,  Shirley, 
“ Boona,”  Brisbane,  T.  Petrie,  Stradbroke  Island,  Watkins;  “ Jinjil,”  Cooktown, 
Both.  Usually  a small  or  middle-sized  tree,  but  sometimes  attaining  a great 
height,  with  a persistent  furrowed  bark.  Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or  lanceolate, 
acuminate,  about  3 to  Gin.  long,  with  numerous  fine  transverse  parallel  veins, 
often  scarcely  visible.  Umbels  loose,  several-flowered,  mostly  in  a'  terminal 
corymbose  panicle,  the  peduncles  slightly  compressed  or  angular.  Flowers  rather 
large,  on  pedicels  of  2 to  4 lines.  Calyx-tube  when  open  broadly  turbinate,  3 to  4 
lines  diameter,  often  dilated  at  the  margin.  Operculum  short,  hemispherical, 
umbonate  or  shortly  acuminate.  Stamens  attaining  5 or  6 lines  ; anthers  very 
small  but  ovate,  with  distinct  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  short, 


Eucalyptus.] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


638 


flat-topped.  Fruit  more  or  less  urceolate,  i to  fin.  long,  usually  contracted  above 
the  capsule  and  often  expanded  at  the  orifice,  the  rim  narrow,  the  capsule  sunk. 
Seeds  large,  ovate,  more  or  less  bordered  by  a wing,  usually  narrow. — DC.  Prod, 
iii.  220;  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  46;  Metrosideros  gummifcra,  Soland.  in  Gsertn. 
Fruct.  i.  170  t.  B4  f.  1. 

Hab.:  From  border  of  N.S.W.  to  Cape  York. 

The  figure  usually  quoted  of  E.  corymbosa,  Cav.  Ic.  4 t.  340,  is  a very  indifferent  one,  and 
looks  much  more  like  E.  paniculate. — Benth. 

Gum  will  quickly  cure  ringworm. — Macartney. 

Foliage  contains  little  oil ; ljoz.  obtained  from  561b.  of  dried  leaves. — J.  F.  Bailey. 

This  tree  yields  a tan-resin  gam  in  large  quantities,  exuding  at  times  in  a bright-red  fluid  of 
the  consistence  of  treacle;  it  often  becomes  imprisoned  between  the  layers  of  wood,  where  it  gets 
hard  and  may  be  broken  out  in  quantity.  It  varies  from  being  soluble  in  water  to  complete 
insolubility  in  water  and  alcohol.— Lauterer. 

Wood  of  a red  colour,  containing  cavities  full  of  gum  ; a very  durable  wood  if  used  whole,  as 
for  stumps,  posts  or  piles. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  199. 

56.  E.  terminalis  (flowers  terminal),  F.  r.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  89  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  257  ; “ Narm-boon-bong,”  Cloncurry,  Palmer  : “ Kulcha,” 
Gilbert  River,  Palmer:  “ Gaja,”  Palmer  River,  Both.  A tree,  very  closely  allied 
to  E.  corymbosa  and  might  be  termed  its  inland  representative  ; it  is  often 
scarcely  to  be  distinguished  from  it  in  the  dried  specimens.  It  is,  however,  of  a 
paler  or  more  glaucous  colour,  the  leaves  usually  narrower  with  less  conspicuous 
veins,  the  operculum  very  obtuse,  hemispherical  and  not  showing  the  junction 
Avith  the  calyx-tube  till  just  as  it  is  detached.  The  fruit  is  somewhat  larger  and 
less  urceolate,  that  is  contracted  at  the  orifice  without  so  distinct  a neck,  the  size 
varies  from  7 lines  to  lin.  long.  Seeds  with  prominent  wing. 

Jlab.:  An  inland  tropical  tree. 

Manna  is  procured  from  the  leaves  and  small  branches  by  being  gathered  and  laid  on  pieces  of 
bark,  when  the  particles  of  sugar  or  gum  fall  off  or  are  scraped  off  with  mussel-shells  into  a 
“ kooliman,”  or  the  leaves  when  covered  with  the  white  exudation  are  pounded  together  with  a 
stone  and  roasted  in  the  ashes.  Sometimes  the  sugary  particles  are  gathered  as  they  fall  from  the 
trees.  After  the  rainy  season  this  food  is  said  to  be  abundant. — Palmer. 

Wood  red  ; subject  to  large  gum-veins. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  I Foods  No.  199a. 

57.  E.  dichromophloia  (two-coloured  bark),  F.  r.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc. 
iii.  89 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  257.  A moderate-sized  or  large  tree,  the  bark 
smooth,  ash-grey,  at  length  separating  from  the  inner  reddish  bark.  Leaves 
long-lanceolate,  narrow,  thick,  with  numerous  very  fine  close  parallel  nerves,  the 
intramarginal  one  scarcely  distant  from  the  edge.  Umbels  several-flowered, 
forming  loose,  terminal,  corymbose  panicles  ; young  buds  obovoid,  with  a very 
short  obtuse  operculum  ; perfect  flowers  unknown.  Anthers  of  E.  corymbosa. 
Fruit  urceolate-globose,  with  a contracted  neck,  smooth,  attaining  sometimes  ^in. 
diameter,  but  mostly  much  smaller,  the  rim  thin,  the  capsule  sunk.  Perfect 
seeds  broadly  winged  on  one  side. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown. 

It  appears  to  differ  but  slightly  from  E.  terminalis  in  the  size  and  shape  of  the  fruit,  and 
perhaps  in  the  bark. — Bcntli.  l.c. 

Fruit  considerably  smaller  than  in  E.  corymbosa,  about  the  size  of  E.  tracliyphloia. — 
F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

58.  E.  trachyphloia  (rough-barked),  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ.  [Ann.  Soc.  iii.  90, 
and  Fragm.  xi.  4B  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  221  ; F.  r.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  5.  White 
Bloodwood.  “Gou-unya,”  Nanango,  Shirley.  A tree  of  moderate  size,  with  a 
persistent  spongy-fibrous  bark,  foliage  dense.  Leaves  elongate-lanceolate,  often 
falcate,  4 to  6in.  long,  with  numerous  fine  parallel  almost  transverse  veins,  the 
intramarginal  one  close  or  very  near  the  edge.  Oil-dots  copious,  sometimes  much 
concealed.  Umbels  in  terminal  panicles  containing  from  4 to  8 small  pedicellate 


LT.  MYRTACEiB. 


[Eucalyptus. 


r,84 

Howers.  Calyx-tube  ovate-pyriform  in  the  bud.  Operculum  depressed,  hemi- 
spherical. Stamens  all  fertile.  Anthers  dorsifixed,  ovate,  somewhat  truncate, 
>lits  parallel.  Style  short  ; stigma  but  slightly  dilated.  Fruit  ovoid-truncate, 
contracted  towards  the  orifice,  about  3 lines  long,  the  rim  thin,  the  capsule 
deeply  sunk.  Seeds  ovate,  about  1 line  long. 

Hub.:  Common  in  southern  localities  ; Burnett  and  Mackenzie  Rivers. 

59.  E.  maculata  (spotted  trunk),  Hook.  Jc.  PI.  t.  619  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  258  ; F.  r.  M.  Eucalypt.  Dec.  3.  Spotted  Gum.  “ Urar,”  Brisbane,  T.  Petrie. 
A lofty  tree  with  a smooth  bark  falling  off  in  patches  so  as  to  give  the  trunk  a 
spotted  appearance.  Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or  lanceolate,  straight  or  falcate, 
acuminate,  mostly  4 to  Gin.  long  or  even  more,  with  numerous  parallel  but 
rather  oblique  veins,  rather  coarse,  the  intramarginal  one  close  to  the  edge. 
Umbels  8-ffowered,  usually  several  together,  on  short  leafless  branches, 
forming  a panicle  or  corymb.  Peduncles  and  pedicels  short  and  thick,  scarcely 
angular.  Calyx-tube  in  the  young  bud  shortly  cylindrical,  when  open  broadly 
turbinate,  3 to  4 lines  diameter.  Operculum  hemispherical,  much  shorter  than 
the  calyx-tube,  the  outer  one  much  thicker  and  more  persistent  than  in  most 
species  where  it  has  been  observed,  and  usually  umbonate  or  shortly  acuminate, 
the  inner  one  (corresponding  to  the  single  one  of  both  species)  thin,  obtuse, 
smooth,  and  shining.  Stamens  attaining  4 or  5 lines ; anthers  ovate  with 
parallel  distinct  cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  flat-topped.  Fruit  ovoid- 
urceolate,  usually  about  4in.  long  and  nearly  as  much  in  diameter,  the  rim  narrow, 
the  capsule  deeply  sunk. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  47  ; E.  rarieyata,  F.  v.  M.  in  Journ. 
Linn.  Soc.  iii.  88. 

Hab.:  Common  in  southern  localities. 

Wood  of  a light-grev  colour,  very  elastic  and  durable,  valuable  in  wheelwrights’  and  carriage 
work. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  202. 

Var.  citriodora.  E.  citriodora,  Hook,  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  235  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  257. 
Citron  scented  Gum.  Differing  principally  in  the  Citron-like  fragrance  of  the  foliage.  Hab.: 
Gladstone,  Rockhampton,  Springsure,  Herberton,  and  Port  Denison. — Wood  of  perhaps  a darker 
colour,  of  equal  value  to  that  of  the  normal  form. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  203. 

60.  E.  Watsoniana  (after  Th.  Wentworth  Watson),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  x.  98, 
Eucalypt.  Dec.  7.  A tall  tree  with  a persistent,  wrinkled,  somewhat  scaly  bark 
of  a brownish  colour.  Leaves  on  long  petioles,  ovate  to  narrow-lanceolate, 
slightly  falcate,  the  larger  ones  4 to  5in.  long,  1 to  Hin.  broad,  thin-coriaceous, 
primary  lateral  nerves  rather  close  and  regular,  intramarginal  one  close  to  the 
edge.  Umbels  2-4-flowered,  sometimes  forming  terminal  panicles.  Calyx-tube 
slightly  warted,  about  iin.  long,  campanulate.  Operculum  depressed-hemi- 
spherical, thick,  umbonate,  smooth.  Stamens  all  fertile,  inflexed  in  the  bud  ; 
filaments  yellowish,  about  8 lines  long.  Anthers  narrow-oblong,  opening  by 
longitudinal  slits.  Style  shorter  than  the  stamens ; stigma  not  broader  than  the 
style.  Fruit  about  lin.  long,  campanulate-urceolate,  3 to  4-celled.  Seeds  shiny- 
brown,  compressed,  smooth,  2 to  3 lines  long,  sharply  angular. 

Hab.:  Recorded  for  Queensland  by  F.  v.  Mueller. 

61.  E.  tetradonta  (four-toothed),  F.  r.  M.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  97,  Euca- 
lypt. Dec.  1;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  260.  “ Olm-bah,”  Mitchell  River,  Palmer; 

“ Kalmba,”  Palmer  River,  Both.  A tree  with  a whitish,  fibrous,  persistent  bark 
and  angular  branchlets.  Leaves  opposite  or  alternate,  long-lanceolate,  acuminate, 
often  falcate  and  above  6in.  long,  coriaceous,  but  the  numerous  somewhat  oblique 
veins  prominent,  the  intramarginal  one  near  the  edge.  Peduncles  axillary  or  2 
or  3 together  at  the  ends  of  the  branches,  short  and  thick  but  not  dilated,  each 
bearing  3 or  very  rarely  5 rather  large  flowers,  on  thick  angular  or  flattened 
pedicels  of  2 to  4 lines.  Calyx-tube  obconical  or  turbinate,  3 to  4 lines  long,  with 
4 rounded  very  obtuse  teeth,  slightly  prominent  on  the  bud.  Operculum  hemi- 


F -ucalyptus .] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


635 


spherical  or  nearly  globular,  smooth.  Stamens  very  numerous,  the  longest 
attaining  5 or  6 lines,  not  distinctly  arranged  in  clusters,  indexed  in  the  bud  ; 
anthers  oblong,  with  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  flat-topped. 
Fruit  oblong-cylindrical,  i to  fin.  long,  4 to  6 lines  diameter,  not  contracted  at 
the  orifice,  the  rim  narrow  but  forming  an  acutely  prominent  ring,  the  capsule 
sunk,  usually  8-celled.  Seeds  obliquely  oval. 

Hab.:  Batavik  River,  Dr.  IF.  E.  Roth. 

The  leaves  of  the  young  trees  are  bruised  and  rubbed  in  water  in  a “ kooliman”  with  the  hands 
till  the  water  is  green  and  thick,  when  it  is  drunk  for  fevers  and  headache. — E.  Palmer. 


16.  TRISTANIA,  R.  Br. 

(Said  to  be  after  Jules  M.  C.  Tristan,  a French  botanist.) 

(Lophostemon,  Schott.:  Tristaniopsis,  Brongn.  and  Gris.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate-campanulate  or  open,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base,  the 
free  part  broad  ; lobes  5,  short.  Petals  5,  broad,  much  imbricate.  Stamens 
indefinite,  more  or  less  united  in  bundles  opposite  the  petals,  the  filaments  or  free 
parts  filiform,  inflectel  or  rarely  erect;  anthers  versatile,  the  cells  parallel, 
opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  inferior,  half  superior,  or  free,  except  the  broad 
base,  but  included  in  the  calyx-tube,  flat  or  convex  on  the  top  and  very  rarely 
depressed  in  the  centre  round  the  style,  3-celled,  with  several  horizontal  or 
recurved  ovules  in  each  cell ; style  filiform,  with  a more  or  less  capitate  stigma. 
Capsule  adnate  or  almost  free,  enclosed  in  or  protruding  from  the  persistent 
calyx,  opening  loculicidally  in  3 valves.  Perfect  seeds  where  known  few  in  each 
cell,  linear-cuneate  or  expanded  at  the  end  into  a flat  wing  ; testa  thin  ; embryo 
straight  ; coteyledons  broad  and  folded  over  each  other,  as  long  as  or  longer  than 
the  radicle. — Tall  shrubs  or  trees.  Leaves  alternate  or  irregularly  verticillate  at 
the  ends  of  the  branches,  or  in  one  species  opposite,  penniveined.  Flowers  small, 
yellow  or  white,  in  pedunculate  axillary  cymes.  Bracts  very  deciduous  or 
entirely  wanting. 


Besides  the  Australian  species,  the  genus  comprises  at  least  two  from  New  Caledonia  and 
about  four  from  the  Indian  Archipelago.—  Benth. 


Section  I.  Lophostemon, — Leaves  alternate.  Stamens  indexed,  o-adelphous,  with  lonO 
claws.  Ovary  inferior,  flat-topped,  with  very  numerous  horizontal  or  recurved  ovules  in  each  cell- 
Seeds  linear -enneate. 

Staminal  claws  half  as  long  as  the  petals.  Flowers  usualy  small  (yellow  ?). 

Calyx-lobes  short  and  very  obtuse 1.  T.  suaveolens. 

Staminal  claws  as  long  as  the  petals.  Flowers  few  in  the  cyme,  rather  large. 

Calyx-lobes  lanceolate,  acute 2.  T.  conferta. 


Section  II.  Eutristania.—  Leaves  alternate.  Stamens  inflexed,  5-adelphous,  with  very 
short  claws.  Ovary  adnate  or  half  superior,  ovules  all  reflexed.  Seeds  very  flat  or  expanded  at 
the  end  into  a flat  winy,  the  embryo  in  the  thickened  base. 


Ovary  adnate.  Flowers  small,  white,  and  numerous 3.2’.  lactiflua. 

Ovary  half  superior.  Stamens  scarcely  exceeding  the  petals.  Seeds  winged. 

Flowers  yellow. 

Flowers  small  and  numerous.  Calyx  not  1 line  diameter .4.  7’.  exiliflora. 

Flowers  few.  Calyx  14  to  2 lines  diameter ij.  T.  lamina. 

Cymes  axillary  or  lateral.  Flowers  yellow,  numerous.  Petals  orbicular,  about 
4 lines  diameter,  fugacious.  Fruit  near  ^in.  long,  3-valved.  Seeds  winged, 

3 lines  long 0.  T.  lonyivalvis. 


1.  T.  suaveolens  (flowers  fragrant),  Sin.  in  Rees  Cycl.  xxxvi.;  lienth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  262.  Swamp  Mahogany.  “ Boolarchoo,”  Stradbroke  Island,  Watkins; 
“ Urona,”  Bundaberg,  A>//.s' ; “ Bujir,”  Cooktown,  Roth.  A shrub  or  tree,  more 
or  less  glaucous  or  hoary,  or  the  young  shoots  hirsute,  rarely  quite  glabrous. 
Leaves  alternate,  petiolate,  ovate-elliptical,  ovate-lanceolate  or  elliptical-oblong, 
obtuse  or  acuminate,  more  or  loss  distinctly  penniveined  and  reticulate,  in  some 


LI.  MYRTACEjL. 


636 


[Tristania. 


specimens  H to  3in.,  in  others  3 to  Gin.  long.  Flowers  usually  small,  in  axillary 
cymes,  the  common  peduncle  J to  £in.  long,  more  or  less  flattened.  Calyx-tube 
campanulate,  usually  hoary-pubescent,  1 to  1£  line  long;  lobes  very  short  and 
broad.  Petals  li  line  diameter.  Staminal  bundles  about  as  long  as  the  petals, 
the  claws  half  as  long  as  the  petals,  rather  broad,  with  numerous  inflexed 
filaments.  Ovary  wholly  adnate,  flat  or  concave  at  the  top  and  glabrous,  not 
depressed  round  the  style  ; ovules  very  numerous  in  each  cell,  on  an  oblong 
reflexed  placenta.  Fruiting-calyx  very  open,  2 to  nearly  4 lines  diameter,  the 
capsule  not  exceeding  the  tube.  Seeds  linear-cuneate,  not  winged  ; cotyledons 
rather  broad  and  folded. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  210;  Melaleuca  tniaveolem,  Gaertn.  Fruct. 
t.  173  t.  35  ; Tristania  depressa,  A.  Cunn.  in  Bot.  Reg.  under  n.  1839  ; DC. 
Prod.  iii.  210;  T.  rhytiphloia,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  81. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown;  Cape  York,  M‘ Gillivray  ; Endeavour  River,  Banks  and 
Solander  ; Repulse  Bay,  A.  Cunningham  ; Rockingham  Bay,  Rockhampton,  Dallachy ; Burnett 
River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Mount  Elliott,  Fitzalan  : Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  &c.,  Backhouse, 
If'.  Hill,  and  others.  Flowering  from  November  to  January. 

Wood  of  a red  colour,  resembling  Spanish  Mahogany,  hard  and  close-grained,  but  best  fitted 
for  underground  work ; extensively  used  for  piles,  as  it  is  found  to  resist  the  ravages  of  the 
teredo  longer  than  any  wood  as  yet  tried  in  this  colony. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  204. 

Var.  ylabrescens,  Syn.  Ql.  FI.  182.  This  differs  from  the  normal  form  only  iu  the  want  of  the 
hoariness  of  its  foliage,  the  leaves  being  a bright  shiny-green.  Found  in  low,  almost  swampy 
localities,  in  the  south. — Wood  similar  to  the  last,  and  used  for  the  same  purposes.  Bailey’s 
Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  205. 


2.  T.  conferta  (leaves  crowded),  It.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hurt.  Keir  ed.  2,  iv.  417  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  263.  Brisbane  Box.  “ Tubbil-pulla,”  Stradbroke  Island, 
Watkins,  and  Brisbane,  '/’.  Petrie.  A tall  tree,  with  a smooth  brown  deciduous 
bark  and  dense  foliage,  the  young  shoots  often  clothed  with  spreading  hairs, 
otherwise  glabrous  except  the  inflorescence,  the  buds  of  the  succeeding  year 
covered  with  large  imbricate  coloured  scales.  Leaves  alternate,  crowded  at  the 
ends  of  the  branches  so  as  to  appear  verticillate,  petiolate,  ovate  or  ovate-lanceo- 
late, acuminate  or  rarely  almost  obtuse,  usually  3 to  6in.  long,  penniveined  and 
minutely  reticulate  underneath.  Flowers  in  cymes  of  3 to  7,  usually  on  the 
young  wood  below  the  cluster  of  leaves,  the  floral  leaves  mostly  abortive,  the 
peduncle  flattened,  \ to  ^in.  long,  or  rarely  elongated.  Calyx-tube  more  or  less 
pubescent  or  hirsute,  turbinate,  1^  to  near  3 lines  long  ; lobes  narrow,  acute, 
nearly  as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  undulate,  often  3 lines  diameter.  Staminal 
bundles  often  ^in.  long,  inflexed,  the  claws  long  and  linear,  with  numerous  short 
slender  filaments  nearly  along  their  whole  length  ; anthers  very  small.  Ovary 
wholly  adnate,  flat-topped  without  any  central  depression  ; ovules  exceedingly 
numerous  in  each  cell,  covering  an  oblong  reflexed  placenta.  Fruiting-calyx  3 to 
4 lines  diameter,  hemispherical  or  cup-shaped,  truncate,  smooth,  the  capsule  level 
with  the  orifice  or  shortly  exceeding  it.  Seeds  linear-cuneate,  not  winged  ; coty- 
ledons folded. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  210  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  57  ; T.  subverticillata, 
Wendl.  in  Ott.  Dietr.  Allg.  Gartenz.  i.  186  ; T.  macrophylla,  A.  Cunn.  in  Bot. 
Reg.  t.  1839  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  82  ; Lophostemon  arborescens,  Schott  in  Wien. 
Zeitschr.  iii.  (1830)  772. 

Hab.:  Sandy  Cape  and  Keppel  Bay,  R.  Brown;  mouths  of  the  Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; 
Rockhampton,  Edgecombe  Bay,  etc.,  Dallachy,  Henne ; Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A. 
Cunningham  and  other.  Flowering  about  December. 

Wood  of  a dark-grey  colour ; hard,  tough,  and  close  in  the  grain  ; when  kept  dry  very  durable : 
shrinks  very  much  in  drying;  used  for  joists,  knees  of  vessels,  and  by  the  wheelwright. — Bailey's 
Cat.  Ql.  1 foods  No.  206. 

Leaves  on  the  Brisbane  River  tree  often  discoloured  by  the  fungus  blight  Phoma  purpurea, 
C.  and  M. 

Var .Jibrosa.  This  variety  forms  a handsome  compact  tree,  and  differs  from  the  usual  form  in 
its  bark  being  fibrous  on  both  trunk  and  branches,  and  in  its  inflorescence  being  more  slender 
and  usually  longer,  the  calyx  only  slightly  hairy,  the  flowers  smaller.  Hab.:  Pimpama,  W.  B. 
Bailey. 


637 


Tristania.  j LI.  MYRTACEjE. 

3.  T.  lactiflua  (sap  milky),  F.  v.  M.  Fraym.  i.  82 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  in. 
263.  A tree  attaining  30ft.,  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots,  under  side  of  the 
leaves,  and  inflorescence  glaucous-pubescent.  Leaves  alternate,  often  almost 
verticillate  at  the  ends  of  the  branches,  ovate  or  broadly  ovate-lanoeolate,  obtuse 
or  acute,  penniveined,  3 to  6in.  long,  on  a petiole  often  of  lin.  Flowers  white, 
small  and  very  numerous,  in  axillary  cymes,  the  common  peduncle  often  1 to  2in. 
long.  Calyx-tube  broad,  scarcely  1 line  long,  with  very  short  rounded  lobes  as  in 
T.  sudveolens.  Petals  about  li  line  diameter.  Staminal  bundles  about  as  long  as 
the  petals,  inflexed,  the  claws  short  and  broad,  each  with  15  to  20  filaments. 
Ovary  wholly  adnate,  concave  at  the  top  witnout  any  central  depression.  Ovules 
reflexed,  not  so  numerous  as  in  T.  suaveolens.  Fruit  not  seen. 

Hab.:  Gulf  country,  E.  Palmer. 

4.  T.  exiliflora  (flowers  small),  F.  r.  M.  Fraym.  v.  11  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  264.  Glabrous  or  the  inflorescence  minutely  hoary-pubescent.  Leaves 
alternate,  lanceolate  or  elliptical,  almost  acute,  much  narrowed  into  the  petiole, 
penniveined,  2 to  4in.  long.  Flowers  yellow,  small,  rather  numerous,  in  small 
axillary  shortly  pedunculate  cymes,  the  pedicels  at  length  longer  than  the  calyx. 
Calyx-tube  turbinate  or  almost  hemispherical,  rather  above  ^ line  long,  lobes 
ovate,  rather  shorter.  Petals  about  f line  diameter.  Staminal  bundles  inflexed, 
not  exceeding  the  petals,  the  claws  short,  each  with  2 to  4 filaments,  often  hairy 
at  the  base.  Ovary  half-adnate,  the  summit  very  convex,  pubescent,  not  depressed 
round  the  style,  with  3 to  6 pendulous  ovules  in  each  cell.  Fruit  obovoid- 
globular,  about  2 lines  diameter,  adnate  at  the  base  only,  filling  the  calyx-tube 
and  protruding  considerably  beyond  it.  Seeds  obovoid,  not  much  flattened,  the 
testa  sometimes  with  a short  appendage  or  quite  wingless,  often  lined  with  a 
granular  substance.  Cotyledons  broad,  deeply  lobed  and  closely  folded  over  the 
radicle. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy , and  many  other  tropical  localities. 

The  species  is  very  closely  allied  to  T.  laurina,  with  the  same  foliage,  floral  characters,  and 
fruit,  but  with  the  flowers  as  small  as  in  T.  lactiflua , and  the  seeds,  as  far  as  known,  not  winged. 
— Benth. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  close  in  grain,  very  tough  and  elastic  ; useful  for  tool-handles. — 
Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  IVnods  No.  206a. 

5.  T.  laurina  (Laurel-like),  li.  Br.  in  Ait.  Hort.  Kew  ed.  2 iv.  417  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  264.  Water  Gum.  A somewhat  scrubby  shrub  in  exposed  locali- 
ties, becoming  in  moist  situations  a tree,  often  of  great  height,  the  young  shoots 
more  or  less  glaucous  or  silky-pubescent,  especially  the  under  side  of  the  leaves, 
the  older  foliage  glabrous.  Leaves  alternate,  lanceolate,  elliptical  or  obovate- 
lanceolate,  acuminate,  penniveined,  2 to  4in.  long,  narrowed  into  a petiole. 
Flowers  yellow,  in  short  axillary  cymes,  on  a very  short  common  peduncle,  the 
pedicels  rarely  longer  than  the  calyx.  Calyx-tube  broadly  campauulate,  1^  to  21 
lines  diameter,  lobes  small,  triangular,  distant  at  the  time  of  flowering  although 
imbricate  in  the  young  bud.  Petals  1J  to  2 lines  long,  usually  undulate. 
Staminal  bundles  inflexed,  scarcely  exceeding  the  petals,  the  claws  very  short, 
each  with  15  to  20  filaments.  Ovary  half-adnate,  the  summit  very  convex, 
hirsute,  not  depressed  round  the  style,  with  several  (about  10)  reflexed  ovules  in 
each  cell.  Capsule  obovoid  or  almost  globular,  3 to  5 lines  diameter,  adnate  at 
the  base  only,  filling  the  calyx-tube  and  protruding  considerably  beyond  it.  Seeds 
oblong,  flat,  laterally  attached  near  the  top,  the  upper  part  thin  and  wing-like, 
embryo  in  the  lower  thickened  portion  ; cotyledons  deeply  cordate  and  folded  over 
each  other;  radicle  superior,  rather  long. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  210;  F.  v.  M.  Fragm. 
i.  81  ; Melaleuca  laurina , Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  275. 

Hab.:  Along  creeks,  southern  localities.  Flowering  in  December  and  January. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  close-grained,  very  tough  and  strong ; useful  for  tool-handles  — 
Bailey’s  Cat.  (}! • H oods  No.  206b. 


LI.  MYRTACE.E. 


Tristania. 


638 


6.  T,  longivalvis  (valves  of  fruit  long),  F.  v.  M.;  Whu/'s  South.  Sci.  Rec., 
new  series,  ii.,  April  1886.  Buttercup  Tree.  A tree  of  small  size,  the  branchlets 
pendulous.  Leaves  scattered  on  very  short  petioles,  obovate,  attaining  a length 
of  4in.  with  a breadth  of  2in.,  glabrous,  finely  penninerved  and  thinly  net-veined, 
somewhat  shining  above  and  paler  beneath.  Cymes  axillary  or  lateral,  very 
spreading,  the  peduncles  slender ; pedicels  as  long  as  or  longer  than  the  flowers, 
thickened  upwards.  Calyx-lobes  semi-orbicular,  deltoid,  shorter  than  the  tube. 
Petals  orbicular,  yellow,  glabrous,  about  4 lines  wide,  hardly  contracted  towards 
the  base.  Stamens  shorter  than  the  petals,  numerous  in  each  fascicle,  the  anthers 
terminated  by  a turgid  gland.  Ovary  half-adnate  to  calyx-tube  ; ovules  numerous 
in  each  cell.  Style  3 lines  long,  subulate,  glabrous;  stigma  scarcely  dilated. 
Fruit  nearly  6 lines  long  ; valves  3,  deltoid-lanceolate,  acute,  and  hard ; seeds 
rather  numerous  in  each  cell  and  closely  packed,  broad,  much  compressed,  and 
terminating  in  a conspicuous  membrane,  nearly  3 lines  long. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Prince  of  Wales  Island,  R.  Brown  ; Thursday  Island,  Rev.  B.  Scortecliini ; Cape  York, 
B.  Gulliver.  Flowering  about  June. 

Wood  of  a straw  colour,  close-grained,  very  hard  and  tough,  stands  well  in  drying,  and  will 
likely  prove  valuable  for  building  purposes. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  20(ic  (there  given  as 
probably  T.  macrosperma,  F.  v.  M.,  a New  Guinea  species). 


17.  SYNCARPIA,  Ten. 

(Referring  to  the  carpels  being  united.) 

(Kamptzia,  Nees.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate  or  campanulate,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base,  the  free 
part  erect  or  dilated ; lobes  4 or  rarely  5,  persistent.  Petals  4 or  rarely  5, 
spreading.  Stamens  indefinite,  free,  in  1 or  2 series,  sometimes  interrupted 
between  the  petals,  filaments  filiform  ; anthers  versatile,  cells  parallel,  opening 
longitudinally.  Ovary  inferior,  flat-topped  or  convex,  scarcely  depressed  round 
the  style,  2 or  3-celled,  with  1 or  several  ovules  in  each  cell,  erect  on  a basal 
placenta ; style  filiform  with  a small  stigma.  Capsule  included  in  and  adnate  to 
the  calyx-tube,  opening  loculicidally  in  2 or  3 valves.  Seeds  linear-cuneate,  testa 
thin,  embryo  straight,  cotyledons  plano-convex,  longer  than  the  radicle. — Trees. 
Leaves  opposite,  penniveined.  Flowers  in  dense  globular  heads,  either  solitary 
on  axillary  peduncles  or  forming  terminal  panicles. 

The  genus  consists  of  3 species  exclusively  Australian,  and  differing  perhaps  as  much  from 
each  other  as  either  one  does  from  Metrosideros. — Benth. 

Calyxes  hoary,  connate.  Petals  broad.  Ovary  3-celled,  with  several  ovules 


in  each  cell.  Flowers  in  each  head  6 to  10 1.  S.  laurifolia. 

Calyxes  connate,  glabrous  ; the  foliage  and  flowers  much  larger  than  in  No.  I. 

Flowers  in  each  head  usually  7 2.  S.  Hillii. 

Calyxes  free.  Petals  narrow.  Ovary  2-celled,  with  1 ovule  in  each  cell  . . 3.  S.  leptopetala. 


1.  S.  laurifolia  (Laurel-leaved),  Ten.  in  Mem.  Soc.  Ital.  Sc.  Moden.  xxii.  t.  1 ; 
Tenth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  265.  Turpentine  tree.  A slender  tree,  the  young  shoots 
and  under  side  of  the  leaves  more  or  less  hoary-pubescent  or  glaucous.  Leaves 
appearing  sometimes  in  whorls  of  4 from  2 pairs  being  close  together,  from 
broadly  ovate  to  elliptical-oblong,  obtuse  or  obtusely  acuminate,  glabrous  above, 
2 to  3in.  long,  on  petioles  of  \ to  ^in.  Flowers  white,  united,  6 to  10  together 
in  globular  beads,  on  peduncles  of  f to  lin.  at  the  base  of  the  new  shoots,  with 
2 to  4 bracts  close  under  the  head,  either  short  and  scale-like  or  leaf-like  and 
exceeding  the  flowers.  Calyxes  connate  at  the  base,  the  free  parts  broadly  cam- 
panulate, softly  hoary-pubescent,  1 to  l\  line  long,  lobes  short,  broad  and  obtuse. 
Petals  broadly  ovate  or  orbicular,  about  line  long.  Stamens  3 to  4 lines 
long,  in  about  2 rows  round  a flat  disk  fully  3 lines  diameter.  Ovary  flat-topped, 
tomentose,  3-celled,  with  rather  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell,  erect  on  an  oblong 
placenta.  Fruiting-heads  about  -Jin.  diameter,  the  calyxes  connate  to  about  the 


■S'ljncarp ia^  HtLLLL,  BauU 

GmfZahs  Office 

Brisbane..  & 


Pi.  XX///. 


F.  c Win, 


Sgncarpia.] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


639 


middle. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  79  ; Metrosideros  ylomulifcra,  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn. 
Soc.  iii.  269  ; DC.  Prod.  iii.  225  ; Tristania  albens,  A.  Cunn.  in  Bot.  Reg.  under 
n.  1889  ; DC.  Prod.  iii.  210 ; Kamptzia  albens,  Nees  in  Nov.  Act.  Nat.  Cur. 
xviii.  Suppl.  Prasf.  9 t.  1 ; Metrosideros  procera  and  M.  propinqua,  Salisb. 
Prod.  351 ? 

Hab.:  Shoalwater  Bay  passage,  R.  Brown;  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Ilei'berton,  J.  F. 
Bailey.  Flowering  about  October. 

Wood  of  a light  colour  near  the  bark,  but  all  the  rest  dark-brown  ; easy  to  work,  but  shrinks 
and  warps  much  in  drying.  Used  for  piles  and  underground  work  generally,  also  shipbuilding. — 
Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  207. 


2.  S.  Hillii  (after  Walter  Hill),  Bail.  Proc.  Roy.  Soc.  Ql.  i.  86.  Peebeen. 
A tall  tree,  producing  a durable  timber  ; bark  thick,  deeply  furrowed,  of  a reddish 
color.  Leaves  opposite,  the  pairs  often  so  close  as  to  appear  whorled,  ovate  to 
ovate-lanceolate,  shortly  acuminate,  rounded  at  the  base,  4 to  6Jin.  long,  2 to  4in. 
broad,  deep-green  on  the  upper  side,  paler  beneath,  the  midrib  prominent,  trans- 
verse veins  anastomosing  in  an  intramarginal  one  some  distance  from  the  margin, 
both  sides  finely  reticulate.  Petioles  nearly  terete  when  fresh,  much  wrinkled 
when  dry,  ^ to  1 Jin.  long.  Flowers  united  in  heads,  each  head  usually  formed 
of  a whorl  of  6 with  1 in  the  centre.  Peduncle  terete  or  angular  when  dry,  to 
ljin.  long,  with  broad  scale-like  bracts  close  under  the  head.  Calyxes  connate 
at  the  base,  the  free  part  campanulate  ; lobes  obtuse,  often  reflexed.  Petals 
orbicular,  with  undulate  thin  margins.  Stamens  in  2 rows,  inflexed  in  the  bud, 

2 to  5 lines  long  ; filaments  flattened  ; anthers  nearly  globular.  Fruiting  heads 
1 to  ljin.  diameter.  Ovary  flat-topped,  glabrous,  3-celled.  Seeds  linear,  erect 
from  the  thickened  axile  placenta. 

Hab.:  Fraser’s  Island  (so  far  as  at  present  known,  its  only  habit). 

Wood  of  a dark-pink  colour,  close  in  the  grain,  and  tough  ; a useful  building  wood. — Bailey’s 
Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  209. 

Exudes  a soft  yellow  resin,  which  may  be  put  to  the  same  use  as  Strasburg  turpentine;  also 
has  been  proved  a healing  agent  on  chronic  ulcers  and  sores  like  the  best  Hamburg  plaster. — 
Lauterer. 

3.  S.  leptopetala  (petals  slender),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  79  ; Bcnth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  266.  A tree  of  50  to  60ft.,  the  young  shoots,  under  side  of  the  leaves,  and 
inflorescence  minutely  and  closely  tomentose  or  almost  scurfy,  or  at  length 
glabrous,  the  young  branches  angular.  Leaves  ovate-elliptical  or  ovate-lanceolate, 
acutely  acuminate,  penniveined,  glabrous  above,  2 to  4in.  long,  tapering  into 
rather  short  petioles.  Flowers  small  and  numerous,  in  dense  globular  heads  but 
quite  free  from  each  other,  the  common  peduncles  slender,  1 to  ljin.  long,  in 
terminal  clusters  or  panicles.  Bracts  very  small,  linear  or  lanceolate.  Calyx- 
tube  pubescent  or  nearly  glabrous,  membranous,  turbinate-campanulate,  1 to  14- 
line  long  ; lobes  short,  rounded.  Petals  narrow,  f line  long.  Stamens  in  a 
single  row  round  the  margin  of  the  calyx-tube  but  interrupted  between  the  petals, 

3 to  4 lines  long.  Ovary  convex,  pubescent,  2-celled,  with  1 erect  ovule  in 
each  cell. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller , C Moore,  and  others.  Flowering  in 
September. 

Wood  of  a light  colour,  close-grained,  and  tough. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  209. 


18.  LYSICARPUS,  F.  v.  M. 

(Fruits  free.) 

Calyx-tube  campanulate,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base ; lobes  5,  small, 
almost  valvate.  Petals  5,  spreading.  Stamens  indefinite,  free  or  nearly  so,  in 
2 or  more  series  interrupted  opposite  the  sepals,  the  inner  ones  shorter,  a few  of 
the  outer  ones  with  reniform  indehiscent  anthers,  the  others  with  versatile 


640 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


[Lysirarpns. 


anthers,  the  cells  parallel,  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  enclosed  in  the  calyx- 
tube,  but  free  except  the  broad  base,  tapering  above,  but  with  a distinct  depres- 
sion round  the  style,  3-celled  with  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell,  erect  on  a basal 
placenta  ; style  filiform,  with  a capitate  almost  3-lobed  stigma.  Capsule  oblong, 
protruding  from  the  persistent  calyx,  opening  loculicidally  in  3 valves.  Seeds 
— Tree.  Leaves  opposite  or  whorled,  narrow.  Flowers  polygamous,  the  males 
in  irregular  cymes,  the  hermaphrodites  often  solitary. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  the  single  Australian  species.  It  is  very  nearly  allied  to  Metrosideros. — 
Benth. 

1.  L.  ternifolius  (leaves  three  in  each  whorl),  F.  v.  M.  in  Tran*.  Phil.  Inst.  ii. 
68.  Tom  Russell’s  Mahogany  or  Mountain  Oak.  A tree  attaining  about  30ft., 
with  a soft  thick  fibrous  bark,  the  young  branchlets  and  inflorescence  softly 
tomentose-pubescent.  Leaves  opposite  or  in  whorls  of  3,  narrow-linear, 
mucronate-acute  or  rarely  obtuse,  14  to  3in.  long,  with  closely  revolute  margins, 
shining  above,  whitish-pubescent  or  at  length  glabrous  underneath.  Male 
flowers  in  irregular  terminal  or  almost  terminal  leafy  cymes,  the  hermaphrodite 
often  solitary  on  opposite  pedicels  below  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Calyx-tube 
softly  tomentose,  about  14  line  long,  broader  in  the  hermaphrodite  than  in  the 
male  flowers.  Petals  above  1 line  diameter,  orbicular,  pubescent  or  ciliolate. 
Stamens  exceeding  the  petals.  Ovary  pubescent.  Capsule  often  twice  as  long  as 
the  calyx. — Tristania  angmtifolia,  Hook,  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  198. 

Hab.:  On  the  Maranoa,  Mitchell;  Darling  Downs  and  between  the  Mackenzie  and  Dawson 
Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller  : often  found  on  ranges  or  brigalow  scrubs.  Flowering  in  November  and 
December. 

Wood  light-brown,  well  marked,  hard,  heavy  and  elastic;  suitable  for  cabinet-work,  and  has 
been  largely  used  for  railway-sleepers. — Bailey' * Cat.  Ql.  Wood*  No.  210. 

Said  not  to  be  eaten  by  white  ants. 


19.  METROSIDEROS,  Banks. 

(Name  referring  to  the  hardness  of  wood.) 

(Nania,  Miq.) 

Calyx-tube  (in  the  Australian  species)  campanulate,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the 
base,  lobes  5,  rarely  4,  slightly  imbricate.  Petals  5,  rarely  4,  spreading. 
Stamens  indefinite,  free,  in  1 or  more  series,  exceeding  the  petals,  filaments 
filiform ; anthers  versatile,  the  cells  parallel,  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary 
included  in  the  calyx-tube,  inferior  or  half  superior,  slightly  depressed  round  the 
style,  3-celled,  with  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell  closely  packed  in  several  series, 
on  a peltate  or  oblong  adnate  placenta  ; style  filiform,  with  a small  stigma. 
Capsule  inferior,  half  superior,  or  almost  free,  but  surrounded  by  or  enclosed  in 
the  persistent  calyx-tube,  opening  loculicidally  in  3 valves  or  rarely  irregularly 
dehiscent.  Seeds  usually  numerous,  flat,  cuneate  or  linear,  erect ; embryo 
straight,  the  cotyledons  flat  or  folded,  longer  than  the  radicle. — Shrubs  or  trees, 
rarely  climbing.  Leaves  opposite,  penniveined.  Flowers  often  showy,  in  dense 
terminal  trichotomous  cymes,  or  rarely  axillary. 

The  genus  comprises  several  very  variable  species  dispersed  over  the  islands  of  the  Pacific 
and  Indian  Archipelago  from  New  Zealand  to  the  Sandwich  Islands,  with  one  somewhat 
anomalous  species  from  South  Africa. — Benth. 

1.  IVI.  tetrapetala  (four-petaled),  F.  r.  M.  Fray  in.  vii.  41.  A small  tree, 
the  branches  thinly  velvety  and  slightly  compressed.  Leaves  elliptic,  obovate,  or 
orbicular-ovate,  pale  green,  almost  glabrous.  Oil-dots  copious,  chartaceous,  14  to 
3in.  long,  1 to  14in.  broad ; petioles  4 to  6 lines  long.  The  corymbs  or  cymes  on 
long  peduncles.  Bracts  herbaceous,  2 to  3 lines  long,  linear-spathulate. 
Bracteoles  2,  opposite,  canaliculate-linear,  somewhat  pubescent,  14  line  long. 


Metrosiderus.] 


LI.  MYRTACE^. 


641 


Pedicels  almost  lin.  long.  Flower-bud  ovate,  acute,  slightly  velvety.  Calyx- 
lobes  4,  1 to  1J  line  long;  tube  very  short.  Petals  4,  semiovate-rotund,  about 
14  line  diameter,  hairy  on  the  back.  Stamens  5 lines  long,  white  like  the  petals, 
soon  falling.  Anthers  yellow,  ovate,  renate-curvate,  opening  in  two  longitudinal 
slits.  Stigma  very  minute.-  Capsule  as  large  as  a pea,  crustaceous.  Seeds 
brown,  almost  rhomboid-ovate,  trigonis,  or  often  flattened. 

Hab.:  Gilbert  .River,  Cave  Creek,  R.  Daintree  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 

20.  XANTHOSTEMON,  F.  v.  M. 

(Yellow  stamens.) 

(Fremya,  Brongn.  and  Gris.) 

Calyx-tube  broadly  campanulate  or  open,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base  ; 
lobes  4 or  5,  slightly  imbricate,  often  unequal.  Petals  4 or  5,  spreading.  Stamens 
indefinite,  free  or  slightly  united  at  the  base,  in  one  or  more  series  much  exceed- 
ing the  petals  ; filaments  often  rigid  ; anthers  versatile  or,  from  a dilatation  of 
the  connective  round  the  filament,  apparently  attached  by  the  base,  the  cells 
parallel,  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  enclosed  in  the  calyx-tube,  half  inferior 
or  free  except  the  broad  base,  2 to  6-celled,  with  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell, 
closely  packed  in  a single  ring  round  a clavate  or  peltate  placenta  ; style  filiform 
with  a small  stigma.  Capsule  free  except  the  broad  base,  seated  on  the  expanded 
calyx,  or  half  enclosed  in  the  cup-shaped  calyx-tube,  opening  loculicidally  in  2 to 
6 valves.  Seeds  flat  or  angular ; testa  thin  ; cotyledons  broad,  flat  or  folded  over 
each  other,  longer  than  the  straight  or  incurved  radicle. — Trees  or  shrubs. 
Leaves  alternate,  or  opposite  and  alternate  in  one  species,  penni veined.  Flowers 
in  dense  cymes  on  terminal  or  axillary  peduncles,  or  (in  species  not  Australian) 
solitary  or  nearly  so.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  usually  very  small  or  none. 

Besides  the  three  Queensland  species,  there  are  a considerable  number  in  New  Caledonia.  The 
genus  has  since  been  reunited  by  F.  v.  Mueller  with  Metrosideros,  which  it  closely  resembles. 
The  constantly  alternate  leaves,  with  the  insertion  and  arrangement  of  the  ovules,  seem,  how- 
ever, to  justify  the  maintaining  it  either  as  a genus  or  section  at  least  as  distinct  as  Syncarpia, 
Lysicarpus,  and  the  non-Australian  Cloezia , Tepuaiia,  and  Spermolepis. — Benth. 

Leaves  acuminate,  4 to  bin.  long.  Calyx  above  3 lines  diameter,  half 

enclosing  the  capsule 1.  X.  chrysantluis. 

Leaves  ovate-lanceolate,  3 to  Sin.  long.  Flowers  in  racemose  panicles. 

Capsule  somewhat  globose.  Seeds  1 or  2 in  each  cell,  thick,  3 or  4 lines  long  2.  X.  pachyspermus. 
Leaves  opposite  or  here  and  there  alternate,  oval-oblong,  2 to  4in.  long. 

Peduncles  J to  lin.  long  in  the  upper  axils.  Capsule  nearly  globose,  Jin. 

diameter.  Seeds  numerous,  flat 3.  A',  oppositijolius. 

1.  X.  chrysanthus  (golden-flowered),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
268.  “ Choolo-choolo,”  Barron  River,,/.  F.  Haile;/ ; “ Currijello,”  Johnstone 

River,  G.  Y.  Hardin;/.  A tall  handsome  tree  with  a fibrous  bark,  the  branchlets 
somewhat  hoary.  Leaves  lanceolate  or  elliptical,  acuminate  or  almost  acute, 
4 to  6in.  long,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole.  Peduncles  in  the  upper  axils  about 
Jin.  long,  bearing  each  a dense  cyme  of  5 to  10  rather  large  flowers  of  a golden 
yellow.  Calyx-tube  broadly  campanulate,  3 to  3J  lines  diameter,  somewhat 
enlarged  and  half  enclosing  the  fruit ; lobes  ovate- triangular,  shorter  than  the  tube 
and  half  as  long  as  the  orbicular  petals.  Stamens  20  to  25,  in  a single  series, 
the  longest  nearly  lin.  long  ; anthers  oblong  versatile,  the  connective  scarcely 
thickened.  Ovary  more  than  half  superior,  usually  3-celled,  with  numerous  flat 
ovules  closely  packed  in  a single  whorl  round  a peltate  somewhat  clavate  placenta. 
Style  very  long,  not  at  all  immersed.  Capsule  about  5 lines  diameter.  Seeds 
few  perfect,  flat,  with  a thin  testa  ; cotyledons  broad,  2-lobed,  conduplicate,  more 
or  less  enclosing  the  incurved  radicle  ; sterile  seeds  numerous,  of  the  same  shape, 
but  hard  and  homogeneous. — Metrosiderus  chrysantha , F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  159. 

Hab.:  Along  streams,  Rockingham  Bay,  Johnstone  River,  and  other  parts  of  northern 
Queensland. 


642 


LI.  MYRTACE/E. 


[Xantliostemon. 


2.  X.  pachyspermus  (referring  to  the  thick  seeds),  F.  v.  M.and  Bail.,  (Jcc. 
Pap.  Ql.  FI.  t.  4.  Yellow-wood  of  the  Johnstone  River.  A glabrous  tree  of 
medium  size,  the  leaves  alternate  but  often  crowded  at  the  ends  of  the  shoots  and 
so  close  as  to  appear  opposite,  petiolate,  ovate-lanceolate,  at  times  very  obtuse  but 
always  much  tapered  towards  the  base,  8 to  5in.  long,  penniveined,  with  the 
primary  lateral  veins  rather  distant  and  prominent.  Flowers  in  slender  often 
raceme-like  panicles,  2 or  3in.  long,  in  the  upper  axils,  on  slender  pedicels. 
Capsules  somewhat  globose,  more  than  half  superior,  f to  fin.  diameter,  opening 
in  8 hard  valves,  rugose  on  the  back.  Seeds  1 or  2 in  each  cell,  thick,  somewhat 
flattened,  3 or  4 lines  diameter,  with  a thin  glossy  testa. 

Hab.:  Johnstone  River,  Dr.  Thos.  L.  Bancroft. 

Wood  of  a grey  colour,  fine  in  the  grain,  tough  and  strong. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  211. 

By  mistake  the  wood  of  this  tree  is  described  under  Halfordia  scleroxylon  (No.  52a)  in  the 
Catalogue  of  the  Woods  sent  to  the  Colonial  and  Indian  Exhibition,  1886. 

3.  X.  oppositifolius  (opposite-leaved),  2 ml  Add.  to  3rd  Suppl.  Syn.  Ql.  Flora. 
Luya’s  Hardwood ; Honer,  Irontree  or  Redheart.  “ Penda,”  Noosa,  Luya.  A 
large  tree,  glabrous  except  the  inflorescence  and  perhaps  the  early  growth,  forming 
a barrel  of  40  to  50ft.,  with  a diameter  up  to  4ft.  Leaves  opposite  or  here 
and  there  very  rarely  alternate  ovate-oblong,  very  obtuse,  slightly  tapering  at 
the  base,  2 to  4in.  long,  1 to  2fin.  broad,  rather  thick,  on  petioles  of  from  L to 
lin.  long,  the  primary  veins  rather  close  and  parallel,  joining  far  within  the 
margin,  the  finer  reticulation  close  and  prominent  in  the  dried  leaf.  Oil-dots 
small  but  numerous,  hidden  to  the  unassisted  eye  by  the  thick  texture  of  the  leaf. 
Peduncles  ^ to  lin.  long  in  the  upper  axils,  usually  bearing  a cyme  of  3 or  4 
pedicellate  flowers.  Bracts  small,  falling  off  from  the  early  inflorescence.  No 
flowers  collected.  Capsule  nearly  globular,  about  |in.  diameter,  seated  on  the 
base  of  the  expanded  4 or  o blunt-lobed  calyx,  opening  loculicidally  in  3 hard 
valves,  the  epicarp  usually  separating  from  the  endocarp  in  each  valve,  the 
placenta  prominent  and  spuriously  dividing  the  cells.  Seeds  numerous,  flatly 
compressed. 

Hab.:  Noosa. 

This  species  has  the  fruiCof  -V.  clirysanthus,  and  principally  differs  from  that  species  in  the 
position  and  form  of  foliage.  Mr.  A.  F.  Luya,  from  whom  I received  specimens  of  the  tree, 
said  that  “ the  wood  is  indestructible  except  by  fire,  and  is  suitable  for  all  kinds  of  bridge- 
building, for  piles,  girders,  headstocks,  Ac.,  or  in  fact  any  work  where  great  strength  and 
durability  are  essential.” 


21.  BACKHOUSIA,  Hook,  and  Harv. 

(After  James  Backhouse.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate  or  broadly  campanulate,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base  ; 
lobes  4,  almost  petal-like  or  scarious,  persistent.  Petals  4,  shorter  than  or 
scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx-lobes,  usually  persistent.  Stamens  indefinite,  free, 
in  several  series  ; anthers  versatile,  the  cells  parallel,  opening  longitudinally. 
Ovary  in  the  bottom  of  the  calyx-tube,  inferior  or  half  superior,  2-celled,  with 
several  ovules  in  each  cell,  recurved  or  pendulous,  attached  either  in  2 rows  to  an 
axile  placenta,  or  to  a placenta  pendulous  from  the  apex  of  the  cell ; style 
filiform,  with  a small  stigma.  Capsule  enclosed  in  the  persistent  calyx-tube  or 
protruding  from  it,  apparently  indehiscent  or  separating  into  2 cocci.  Seeds 
obovoid  or  cuneate  ; embryo  straight,  cotyledons  (where  known)  conduplicate  and 
longer  than  the  radicle. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  penniveined. 
Flowers  in  cymes  sometimes  reduced  to  heads  or  in  umbels,  on  axillary  peduncles 
often  forming  terminal  leafy  panicles.  Bracts  very  deciduous. 

The  genus  is  confined  to  Australia,  and  may  be  considered  in  some  measure  as  connecting 
the  true  Myrteee  with  the  Leptospermecc,  but  is  readily  known  by  the  calyx,  ovary,  and  fruit. — 
Benth. 


Rarkhousia . J 


LI.  MYRTACEflB. 


643 


Cymes  dense,  corymbose.  Pedicels  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube. 

Leaves  ovate-acuminate.  Calyx-lobes  nearly  equal 1.  B.  myrtifolia. 

Leaves  lanceolate  or  oblong-linear.  Inner  calyx-lobes  large  and  petal-like  2.  B.  angustifolia. 

Cymes  umbel-like.  Pedicels  filiform,  many  times  longer  than  the  calyx- 
tube. 

Leaves  ovate-obtuse.  Placentas  axile 3.  B.  sciadogdiora. 

Leaves  ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate.  Placentas  pendulous  from  the  summit 

of  the  cell 4.  B.  citriodora. 

Leaves  ovate-oblong  near  the  inflorescence,  2 to  4in.  long,  to  2in.  broad. 

Calyx  broadly-turbinate,  ribbed.  Petals  5,  slightly  larger  than  the 

calyx-lobes 5.  B.  Bancroftii. 

1.  B.  myrtifolia  (Myrtle-leaved),  Hook,  and  Harr,  in  Bot.  May. 
t.  4133  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  269.  A slender  tree  or  tall  shrub,  the  young 
shoots  and  the  under  side  of  the  leaves  and  the  inflorescence  more  or  less 
pubescent  or  softly  hirsute,  the  older  foliage  glabrous.  Leaves  ovate,  acutely 
acuminate,  penniveined,  1 to  2in.  long,  narrowed  into  a petiole  of  1 to  2 lines. 
Flowers  white,  in  small  cymes  sometimes  contracted  into  heads,  on  peduncles  of 
f to  lin.  at  the  base  of  the  new  shoots,  forming  terminal  leafy  panicles.  Bracts 
narrow,  falling  off  long  before  flowering.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  softly  pubescent 
or  rarely  glabrous,  nearly  li  line  long;  lobes,  usually  5,  from  ovate-oblong  to 
lanceolate,  petal-like  but  rigid,  2 lines  or  in  large-flowered  forms  3 lines  long. 
Petals  not  half  so  long,  often  5.  Ovary  inferior,  slightly  convex  and  villous  on 
the  top  ; ovules  8 to  10  in  each  cell,  campylotropous,  attached  in  two  rows  to  a 
somewhat  thickened  placenta  adnate  to  the  axis.  Fruit  enclosed  in  the  calyx- 
tube,  but  not  seen  ripe. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  78  ; B.  riparia,  Hook,  in  Bot.  Mag. 
under  n.  4133. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  W.  Hill ; Pine  River,  Fitzalan 

Wood  of  a light-grey  colour,  darker  in  the  centre;  close-grained,  very  hard,  and  tough  ; useful 
for  tool-handles. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  JVnods  No.  212. 

2.  B.  angustifolia  (narrow-leaved),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  79;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  270.  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree,  the  young  shoots  and  inflorescence  minutely 
hoary-pubescent  or  tomentose,  the  adult  foliage  glabrous.  Leaves  lanceolate  or 
narrow-oblong,  obtuse  or  mucronate,  very  obliquely  penniveined,  1 to  lfin.  long. 
Flowers  rather  small,  in  cymes  or  heads  of  3 to  9 each,  on  peduncles  of  |in.  or 
less  in  the  upper  axils,  forming  a divaricate  leafy  panicle.  Calyx-tube  turbinate, 
ribbed,  pubescent,  about  1 line  long,  outer  lobes  orbicular,  as  long  as  the  tube, 
inner  ones  much  larger  and  petal-like.  Petals  shorter  than  the  inner  calyx-lobes. 
Outer  stamens  above  2 lines  long.  Ovary  inferior,  convex  and  pubescent  on  the 
top  ; ovules  about  six  in  each  cell,  campylotropous,  and  attached  in  two  rows  to 
an  axile  placenta  as  in  R.  myrtifolia. 

Hab.:  Dawson  River  and  Bunya  Mountains. 

3.  B.  sciadophora  (flowers  in  umbels),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  26,  171  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  270.  A tree,  either  glabrous  or  the  young  shoots  minutely 
pubescent.  Leaves  broadly  ovate,  obtuse,  1 to  2|in.  long,  on  short  petioles. 
Flowers  small,  numerous,  in  umbel-like  cymes  or  clusters  on  a common  peduncle 
of  k to  fin.  in  the  upper  axils,  the  slender  pedicels  often  Mn.  long.  Calyx-tube 
glabrous,  broadly  campanulate,  about  1 line  long  ; outer  lobes  rounded  and  rather 
shorter,  the  inner  ones  rather  longer  than  the  tube.  Petals  broad,  slightly 
exceeding  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  about  2 lines  long.  Ovary  semiadnate  to 
the  bottom  of  the  calyx,  the  convex  top  slightly  pubescent ; ovules  4 to  6 in  each 
cell,  campylotropous,  attached  in  two  rows  to  an  axile  placenta.  Capsule  filling 
the  calyx-tube,  flat-topped,  apparently  indehiscent  but  readily  separable  into 
two  cocci. 

Hab.;  Rockhampton,  Thazet , with  small  leaves. 


644 


LI.  MYRTACE^E. 


f Barkhonsia. 


4.  B.  citriodora  (Citron-scented),  F.  v.  M.  Fratjm.  i.  78;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  270.  Sweet  Verbena  tree.  A large  tree,  the  young  shoots,  under  side  of  the 
leaves  and  inflorescence  hoary-tomentose  or  at  length  glabrous.  Leaves  ovate  or 
ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate,  coriaceous,  glabrous  above,  8 to  5in.  long,  on  petioles 
of  i to  Ain.  or  more.  Flowers  small,  numerous  in  umbel-like  clusters  on 
peduncles  of  lin.  or  more  in  the  upper  axils  or  at  the  ends  of  the  branches,  the 
slender  pedicels  above  Ain.  long.  Calyx-tube  pubescent,  broadly  campanulate, 
about  1 line  long,  outer  lobes  broad  and  scarcely  longer  than  the  tube,  inner  ones 
longer  and  narrowed  at  the  base.  Petals  shorter  than  the  calyx,  but  not  seen 
expanded.  Ovary  in  the  bottom  of  the  calyx,  semiadnate  with  a conical  top, 
very  rarely  with  a third  cell ; ovules  about  6 to  8 in  each  cell,  pendulous  from  a 
cuneate  placenta  suspended  from  the  summit  of  the  cell.  After  flowering  the 
summit  of  the  ovary  protrudes  much  from  the  calyx,  and  shows  no  sign  of 
splitting,  but  the  ripe  fruit  not  seen. 

Hab  : Moreton  Bay,  W.  Hill,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; North  Coast  Railway. 

Notwithstanding  the  difference  in  the  placentation,  this  speeies  cannot  well  be  generically 
separated  from  the  preceding  one. — Benth. 

Wood  of  a light-pink  colour,  close-grained,  and  hard. — Bailey's  Cal.  Ql.  Woods  Xo.  213. 

5.  B.  Bancroftii  (after  Dr.  Thos.  L.  Bancroft),  Bail,  and  F.  r.  M.  in  Cat. 
Ql.  Woods  1886.  -Johnstone  River  Hardwood.  “ Kara,”  Johnstone  River, 
It.  Y.  Hard  ivy.  A tall  tree  with  a persistent,  thin,  somewhat  scaly  bark  ; the 
branchlets  angular.  Leaves  penninerved,  opposite,  ovate-lanceolate,  or  those 
nearest  to  the  inflorescence  smaller  and  ovate-oblong,  2 to  4in.  long,  1J  to  nearly 
2in.  broad,  very  obtuse  or  shortly  acuminate,  tapering  at  the  base  to  a petiole  of 
about  3 lines  ; midrib  and  primary  veins  prominent,  the  latter  looping  far  within 
the  margin.  Inflorescence  terminal  or  in  the  upper  axils,  in  tricliotomous 
panicles,  the  common  peduncle  slender,  about  2in.  long,  bearing  8 to  5 pedicellate 
flowers  at  the  end  of  the  branches ; pedicels  slender,  about  4 lines  long.  Calyx- 
tube  broadly  turbinate,  strongly  ribbed  and  slightly  pubescent,  scarcely  2 lines 
long  ; lobes  5,  unequal,  broad  and  rounded,  much  imbricated,  with  more  or  less 
of  a scarious  margin,  marked  with  prominent  veins,  persistent  and  enlarging 
somewhat  after  flowering.  Petals  5,  orbicular,  much  crumpled  and  very 
deciduous,  slightly  larger  than  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  free,  numerous, 
inserted  on  a raised  prominent  ring,  inflexed  in  the  bud.  Ovary  broad,  slightly 
sunk  in  the  flower  but  becoming  more  or  less  superior  as  it  advances 
towards  maturity,  2 rarely  3-celled,  with  about  6 ovules  in  each  cell,  the  subulate 
style  rather  long  and  persistent.  Fruit  a dry  capsule,  free  except  its  broad  base, 
oval,  nearly  Ain.  long,  2 or  3-celled,  3 seeds  in  each  cell. 

Hab.:  Johnstone  River,  Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft. 

Wood  of  a light-grey  colour,  hard,  close-grained,  something  like  the  Teak  ; a useful  building- 
timber,  rather  darker  towards  the  centre  in  large  trees,  splits  freely  and  straight. — Bailey's  Cat. 
Ql.  Woods  No.  212b. 

If  exposed  to  the  weather  soon  decays.—  G.  Y.  Hardiny. 


22.  OSBORNIA,  F.  v.  M. 

(After  -John  Walter  Osborne.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate,  not  produced  above  the  ovary ; lobes  8,  nearly  equal, 
persistent.  Petals  none.  Stamens  indefinite,  free,  in  2 or  3 series,  scarcely 
exceeding  the  calyx-lobes  ; filaments  filiform  ; anthers  small,  versatile,  the  cells 
parallel,  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  inferior,  imperfectly  2-celled,  with  several 
ovules  attached  to  a basal  placenta  or  short  dissepiment ; style  subulate,  rather 
thick,  with  a small  stigma.  Fruit  adnate  to  and  included  in  the  scarcely  enlarged 
calyx-tube,  and  crowned  by  the  persistent  lobes,  apparently  dry  and  indehiscent. 
Seeds  1 or  2,  obovoid,  with  a thin  testa ; embryo  straight,  with  thick  flattened  or 


C ) sharin' a.] 


LI.  MYRTACE.B. 


645 


hemispherical  cotyledons  longer  than  the  radicle. — Shrub.  Leaves  opposite, 
penniveined.  Flowers  small,  sessile,  solitary  in  the  axils  or  terminal  and  three 
together.  Bracteoles  deciduous. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  the  single  Australian  species,  and  shows  no  immediate  affinity  to  any 
other  one.  except  in  some  measure  to  Backhousia. — Benth. 


1.  O.  octodonta  (calyx-teeth  eight),  F.  r.  M.  Fratjm.  iii.  81  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  271.  A bushy  shrub,  glabrous  except  the  flowers.  Leaves  obovate- 
oblong,  very  obtuse,  f to  l^in.  long,  much  narrowed  into  a very  short  petiole, 
thickened  at  the  base,  and  leaving  a contraction  at  the  nodes  when  they  fall  off. 
Flowers  sessile,  solitary  in  the  axils  between  2 concave  deciduous  tomentose 
bracteoles,  or  3 together  at  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Calyx  white  with  a close 
tomentum  or  short  down,  tube  narrow,  2 to  2|  lines  long  ; lobes  shorter,  oblong, 
very  obtuse,  much  imbricate  in  the  bud.  Fruit  apparently  dry,  but  not  hard. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria ; Trinity  Bay  ; amongst  the  mangroves  along  the 
tropical  coast. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  close  in  grain,  and  very  hard. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  213a. 


23.  -PSIDIUM,  Linn. 

(From  the  Greek  name  of  the  Pomegranate.) 

Calyx  urceolate  or  obovate  ; limb  undivided  in  (estivation,  separating  valvately 
into  4 to  5 lobes  when  in  flower.  Petals  4 or  5,  free.  Stamens  numerous. 

Ovary  2 or  more  celled,  with  many  ovules  in  each  cell.  Berry  many-seeded. 
Seeds  with  hard  testa  ; embryo  curved,  radicle  long,  cotyledons  short. — Trees  or 
shrubs  with  opposite  entire  leaves,  and  often  large  white  flowers. 

1.  P.  guyava,  Linn.;  Benth.  FI.  Hongk.;  Hook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  468. 
The  Large  Guava.  A small  tree  with  tetragonal  pubescent  branches.  Bark 
thin,  peeling  off  in  thin  flakes.  Leaves  on  short  petioles,  ovate  or  oblong,  3 to 
6in.  long,  nearly  glabrous  above,  pubescent  beneath,  with  the  principal  nerves 
prominent.  Peduncles  axillary,  1 to  3-flowered  ; buds  ovoid  in  the  adnate  part, 
the  free  part  also  ovoid,  but  larger  and  more  or  less  pointed.  Petals  broad. 
Fruit  globose  or  pear-shaped. 

Hab.:  Naturalised  in  many  Queensland  scrubs  ; very  abundant  in  the  Mackay  district,  H.  L. 
Griffith. 

This  tree  is  also  naturalised  in  India.  According  to  Gamble,  the  bark  is  used  as  an  astringent 
medicine  and  (or  the  leaves)  for  dyeing  in  Assam;  and  the  wood,  which  weighs  from  44  to  471b. 
per  cubic  foot,  is  used  for  wood-engraving  and  for  tool-handles. 


24.  RHODOMYRTUS,  DC. 

(Rose-myrtles.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate,  oblong  or  nearly  globular,  scarcely  or  not  at  all  produced 
above  the  ovary  ; lobes  4 or  5,  herbaceous,  persistent.  Petals  4 or  5,  spreading. 
Stamens  numerous  in  several  series,  free ; filaments  filiform  ; anthers  versatile  or 
attached  near  the  base,  with  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  really 
1,  2,  or  3-celled,  with  several  ovules  in  2 rows  in  each  cell,  but  owing  to  spurious 
dissepiments  interposed  between  the  ovules,  appearing  either  2,  4,  or  6-celled  or 
divided  into  numerous  1-ovulatcd  cells  superposed  in  2,  4,  or  6 rows  ; style  fili- 
form, with  the  stigma  usually  peltate.  Fruit  a berry  or  almost  a drupe,  globular, 
ovoid,  or  cylindrical,  divided  into  1-seeded  cells  or  nuts  superposed  in  2 to  6 or 
almost  in  a single  row.  Seeds  compressed,  reniform,  or  nearly  orbicular,  with  a 
hard  testa  ; embryo  horseshoe-shaped  or  ring-shaped,  with  a long  radicle  and 
very  small  cotyledons. — Trees  or  shrubs  more  or  less  tomentose  or  villous. 


646 


LT.  MYRTACE.E. 


[Rhodomyrtus. 


Leaves  opposite,  penniveined  or  triplinerved.  Peduncles  axillary,  bearing  1 or  3 
or  rarely  a raceme  or  cyme  of  5 or  more  flowers,  pink  or  white.  Bracts  small,  or 
when  the  peduncles  are  several-flowered  the  lowest  sometimes  leaf-like. 
Bracteoles  small  and  deciduous. 

Besides  the  Australian  species,  there  is  one  which  is  widely  distributed  over  the  Indian 
Archipelago,  extending  to  S.  China,  but  which  has  not  yet  been  detected  in  Australia.  The 
genus  is  nearly  allied  to  Myrtus,  and  still  nearer  to  some  Psidium,  but  appears  to  be  sufficiently 
characterised  by  the  ovary  and  fruit  to  be  distinguished  from  both. — Benth . 


Leaves  penniveined.  Flowers  rather  large  (3,  5,  or  7).  Ovules  and  seeds  in 

6 rows 1.  R.  psidioides. 

Leaves  prominently  triplinerved.  Flowers  small  (usually  3).  Ovules  and 
seeds  in  4 rows 2.  R.  trineura. 

Leaves  penniveined,  but  with  an  intramarginal  vein  often  prominent,  so  as 

to  be  almost  triplinerved.  . 

Flowers  small  in  a loose  dichotomous  cyme.  Ovules  and  seeds  in  4 or  G 

rows 3.  R.  cymiflora. 

Flowers  rather  large  (1,  3,  or  5).  Ovules  in  2 rows.  Fruit  long,  cylin- 
drical, with  the  seeds  in  1 or  2 rows 4.  R.  macrocarpa. 


1.  XL.  psidioides  (Guava-like),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  272.  A tree  attaining 
sometimes  a great  size,  the  young  shoots  more  or  less  hoary-pubescent ; the  older 
foliage  glabrous.  Leaves  petiolate,  from  oval-elliptical  to  ovate-lanceolate  or 
oblong,  shortly  and  obtusely  acuminate,  mostly  3 to  4in.  long,  shining  above, 
penniveined  and  prominently  reticulate  on  both  sides,  the  margins  usually 
recurved.  Peduncles  axillary,  rarely  1-flowered,  mostly  with  1,  2,  or  3 pairs  of 
pedicels  besides  the  terminal  one,  the  lowest  often  again  3-flowered,  the  pedicels 
all  articulate  below  the  calyx.  Calyx-tube  hoary-tomentose,  thick,  fully  2 lines 
long  ; lobes  5 or  rarely  4,  shorter  than  the  tube,  ovate,  the  inner  ones  rather 
larger  and  thinner  than  the  outer.  Petals  about  3 lines  long.  Stigma  broadly 
peltate.  Berry  ovoid-globular,  yellow,  soft-juicy,  size  of  a pigeon’s  egg.  Ovules 
and  seeds  superposed  in  6 rows. — Nelitris  psidioides,  G.  Don,  Gen.  Syst.  ii.  829  ; 
Myrtus  Tozerii,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  86  t.  13. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River  and  other  southern  scrubs. 

Wood  light-coloured,  close-grained,  and  tough. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  214. 

2.  R.  trineura  (leaves  three-nerved),  F.  v.  M.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  272. 
A small  tree,  the  young  shoots  more  or  less  velvety-tomentose.  Leaves  petiolate, 
ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate,  li  to  2-J-in.  long,  triplinerved,  much  reticulate, 
glabrous  above,  loosely  pubescent  or  tomentose  underneath.  Flowers  usually  3 
together,  sessile  in  the  axils,  or  borne  on  a short  common  peduncle.  Calyx-tube 
tomentose-villous,  above  1 line  long  ; lobes  5,  as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  twice 
as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes,  minutely  pubescent  or  glabrous.  Berry  globular, 
villous,  about  3 lines  diameter.  Ovules  and  seeds  superposed  in  4 (or  some- 
times 6?)  rows. — Myrtus  trineura,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  117. 

Hab.:  Gould  Island  ; wooded  shores  of  Rockingham  Bay,  W.  Hill,  Dallachy  ; Bellenden  Ker 
Ranges. 

3.  It.  cymiflora  (flowers  in  cymes),  F.  v.  M.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  273.  A 
tall  shrub  or  small  tree,  glabrous.  Leaves. ovate-elliptical,  shortly  and  obtusely 
acuminate,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole,  finely  and  rather  distantly  penniveined, 
the  veins  united  in  a nerve  much  within  the  margin,  and  more  prominent  towards 
the  base  of  the  leaf,  which  thus  appears  almost  triplinerved.  Flowers  several  but 
not  numerous,  in  loose  dichotomous  cymes,  axillary,  pedunculate,  and  sometimes 
exceeding  the  leaves.  Calyx-tube  turbinate  or  almost  globular,  above  1 line 
diameter;  lobes  5,  broad,  shorter  than  the  tube.  Petals  fully  2 lines  diameter. 
Ovules  superposed  in  6 or  rarely  4 rows.  Fruit  only  seen  young. — Myrtus  cymi- 
flora, F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  12. 

Hab.:  Seaview  Range,  Rockingham  Bay,  and  Mount  Graham.  J.  Dallachy. 


Rhodomyrtus.] 


LI.  MYRTACEj®. 


647 


4.  R.  macrocarpa  (long-fruited),  Benth.  FI.  Amtr.  iii.  273.  Cooktown 
Loquat.  A tall  shrub,  the  young  branches  and  inflorescence  hoary  with  a close 
tomentum.  Leaves  petiolate,  oval- elliptical  or  obovate,  obtuse  or  shortly  acumi- 
nate, often  6 to  lOin.  long,  penniveined  and  reticulate,  glabrous  or  minutely 
pubescent  underneath.  Peduncles  in  the  upper  axils  short,  bearing  either  1 or  3 
flowers,  or  a short  compact  leafy  raceme.  Calyx-tube  cylindrical ; lobes  5, 
unequal.  Petals  tardily  expanding.  Style  large,  peltate.  Ovules  usually  super- 
posed in  2 rows  on  a parietal  placenta  protruding  between  the  rows  (the  ovary 
reduced  to  a single  cell).  Fruit  cylindrical,  f to  ljin.  long,  often  torulose  when 
dry.  Seeds  large,  superposed  usually  in  a single  row,  or  very  rarely  the  two  rows 
perfect,  and  separated  by  firm  partitions,  the  fruit  then  shorter  and  broader. 

Hab.:  Common  in  the  tropical  scrubs. 

The  fruit  is  sometimes  infested  with  a fungus  blight,  Glceosporium  periculosum,  which  has  been 
supposed  to  cause  blindness  and  death  to  those  who  have  eaten  freely  of  the  diseased  fruit. 

Wood  of  a light-grey  colour,  hard,  and  tough. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  I Foods  No.  216. 


25.  MYRTUS,  Linn. 

(Supposed  from  myron,  signifying  perfume.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate,  scarcely  or  not  at  all  produced  above  the  ovary  ; lobes  4 
or  5,  small,  usually  persistent.  Petals  4 or  5,  spreading.  Stamens  numerous,  in 
several  series,  free  ; filaments  filiform ; anthers  versatile,  or  attached  near  the 
base,  with  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  completely  2 or  3-celled, 
or  imperfectly  so,  the  dissepiments  not  quite  reaching  to  the  summit,  with  several 
ovules  in  each  cell  attached  without  order,  or  in  2 rows  to  an  axile  placenta  either 
scarcely  prominent  or  divided  into  2 lamella ; style  filiform,  with  a small  or  rarely 
capitate  stigma.  Fruit  a berry,  globular  or  rarely  ovoid,  with  few  or  rather 
numerous  seeds  not  distinctly  superposed  in  rows.  Seeds  more  or  less  reniform, 
or  almost  circular,  the  testa  hard  or  crustaceous,  rarely  membranous  ; embryo 
curved,  horseshoe-shaped,  circular  or  spirally  involute,  with  a long  radicle  ; coty- 
ledons very  small,  or  rarely  larger  and  folded. — Shrubs  or  rarely  trees,  glabrous  or 
rarely  pubescent  or  silky.  Leaves  opposite,  penniveined.  Peduncles  axillary, 
usually  slender,  1-flowered  or  with  several  flowers  in  a centrifugal  cyme,  assuming, 
in  the  Australian  several-flowered  species,  the  form  of  a 5 or  7-flowered  raceme, 
with  a terminal  flower  sessile  or  on  a shorter  pedicel  than  the  others.  Bracteoles 
small  and  usually  deciduous. 

The  genus  is  rather  numerous  in  extratropical  S.  America  and  the  Andes,  extending  more 
sparingly  to  other  parts  of  S.  America,  to  Mexico,  and  the  W.  Indies.  There  are  also  several  New 
Zealand  species,  and  one  widely  spread  over  S.  Europe  and  W.  Asia,  besides  the  Australian  ones, 
which  are  all  endemic.  There  is  no  positive  character  to  separate  it  from  Eugenia,  except  the 
embryo,  and  the  1-flowered  species  of  the  two  genera  are  not  very  dissimilar  in  foliage.  Gener- 
ally speaking,  however,  the  Myrtles  have  smaller  leaves,  a more  simple  inflorescence,  and  more 


generally  5-merous  flowers  than  the  Eugenias  of  the  Old  World. — Benth. 

Peduncles  axillary,  solitary,  slender,  1-flowered. 

Calyx-limb  shortly  and  broadly  sinuate-lobed.  Ovary  3-celled  ...  1.  M.  rhytisperma. 

Calyx-limb  divided  to  the  base  into  5 lobes. 

Leaves  linear  or  lanceolate,  hoary  underneath.  Ovary  2-celled  . . 2.  M tenuifolia. 

Leaves  ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate,  glabrous. 

Branchlets  angular.  Calyx  slightly  pubescent.  Ovary  2-celled  . 3.  M.  gonoclada. 
Branchlets  hoary.  Calyx  hoary-pubescent,  1 line  or  less  long, 

semirotund.  Fruit  3-celled 4.  M.  lasioclada. 

Branchlets  terete.  Calyx  hoary-pubescent.  Ovary  2-celled,  with 

many  ovules 5.  ill.  Hillii. 

Branchlets  terete.  Calyx  glabrous.  Ovary  3-celled,  with  few 

ovules  in  each  cell 6 . M.  Becklerii. 

Peduncles  clustered  in  each  axil,  or  bearing  3 or  more  flowers.  Ovary 
2-celled. 

Calyx  5-lobed,  glabrous. 

Leaves  very  shining,  usually  acuminate.  Flowers  numerous. 

Pedicels  usually  in  pairs  in  the  racemes.  Ovules  few  ...  7.  M.  Bidwillii, 


Part  II.  Y 


LI.  MYRTACE/E. 


[Myrtus. 


648 


Leaves  scarcely  shining.  Veins  oblique  and  irregular.  Pedicels 

slender,  solitary  along  the  raceme.  Ovules  numerous 8.  HI.  raccmulosa. 

Leaves  scarcely  shining,  acuminate.  Veins  diverging  and  regular. 

Pedicels  short,  clustered  on  a very  short  common  peduncle  ...  9.  HI.  acvienioides. 

Calyx  4-lobed,  pubescent 10.  HI.  fragrantisnma. 

Calyx  4 or  5-lobed.  Ovary  3-celled 11.  M.  Shepherdi. 

Small  tree.  Peduncles  sometimes  solitary,  oftentimes  crowded.  Fruit 

3 lines  diameter,  1-seeded 12.  HI.  nitida. 

Lofty  tree.  Fruit  in  stout,  short  racemes,  globular,  5 lines  diameter, 

1-seeded 13.  ,1/.  exaltatu. 

Mountain  species.  Branchlets  silky-hairy.  Leaves  ovate-acuminate, 

lin.  long,  prominently  oil-dotted 14.  HI.  metrosideros. 

1.  XVI.  rhytisperma  (seeds  wrinkled),  F.  v.  M.  Fraym.  i.  77  ; Bentli.  FI. 


Amtr.  iii.  274.  A shrub  or  small  tree,  the  young  shoots  slightly  pubescent,  the 
older  foliage  glabrous.  Leaves  oblong-elliptical  or  oval-oblong,  obtuse,  f to  l^in. 
(or  sometimes,  according  to  F.  r.  Mueller,  4in.)  long,  narrowed  or  rounded  at  the 
base,  finely  penniveined,  green  on  both  sides.  Peduncles  axillary,  1-flowered, 
slender,  nearly  as  long  as  the  leaves,  with  minute  bracteoles  under  the  calyx. 
Calyx  glabrous  or  nearly  so  ; tube  turbinate,  1|  to  2 lines  long  ; lobes  5,  short, 
broad,  rounded,  connate  into  a broad  sinuate  limb.  Petals  5.  Ovary  imperfectly 
8-eelled,  the  dissepiments  not  reaching  the  axis  in  the  upper  part ; ovules  5 or  6 
in  each  cell ; stigma  peltate.  Berry  4 to  5 lines  diameter,  dark-purple,  sweet. 
Seeds  few,  above  2 lines  broad  ; testa  not  hard,  slightly  granular-rugose.  Embryo 
long,  more  or  less  involute,  with  very  short  cotyledons. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  C.  Moore ; Moreton  Bay,  W.  Hill ; in  the  interior,  Leichhardt ; and 
Rockingham  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

Var.  grandifolia.  Leaves  ovate,  shortly  acuminate,  l£in.  long.  Flowers  larger. 

2.  1VI.  tenuifolia  (leaves  thin),  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  280  ; Bentli.  FI. 
Amtr.  iii.  274.  A small  elegant  spreading  shrub,  the  young  shoots  more  or  less 
silky.  Leaves  from  linear-lanceolate  to  ovate -lanceolate,  obscurely  penniveined, 
flat  or  with  recurved  margins,  rarely  exceeding  lin.,  glabrous  above,  hoary  or 
silky- white  underneath.  Peduncles  axillary,  1-flowered,  slender,  shorter  than  the 
leaves.  Bracteoles  small,  close  under  the  calyx.  Calyx-tube  tomentose,  rather 
broad,  about  f line  long  ; lobes  5,  broad,  obtuse,  nearly  equal,  rather  longer  than 
the  tube.  Petals  5,  ovate-orbicular,  about  2 lines  long.  Ovary  2-celled  ; ovules 
rather  numerous  in  each  cell  on  a 2-lobed  placenta.  Seeds  not  numerous,  testa 
hard,  embryo  semicircular,  narrow,  with  2 small  cotyledons. 

Hab  : Moreton  Island,  Backhouse ; common  on  damp  coastal  land  in  southern  localities. 

The  fruit  makes  a good  preserve. 

8.  IVI.  gonoclada  (branchlets  angular),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  2 75.  A tree,  attaining  about  25ft.,  quite  glabrous,  except  sometimes  the 
calyx,  the  young  branches  often  marked  with  raised  lines  decurrent  from  the 
leaves.  Leaves  ovate,  obtuse  or  obtusely  acuminate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  smooth 
and  shining,  with  an  intramarginal  vein  as  in  J\I.  acmenioides,  but  the  veins  less 
numerous.  Pedicels  solitary,  1-flowered,  axillary  or  below  the  leaves  on  the 
young  shoot,  slightly  thickened  at  the  end,  articulate,  with  a pair  of  minute 
bracts  under  the  calyx.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  glabrous  or  minutely  hoary  ; lobes 
5,  nearly  equal,  much  shorter  than  the  tube.  Petals  5,  about  1^  line  diameter, 
minutely  pubescent-ciliate.  Ovary  2-celled,  pubescent  at  the  top ; ovules  rather 
numerous,  on  a peltate  2-lobed  placenta. 

Hab..  Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart. 

This  is  very  much  like  the  European  HI.  communis , but  at  once  distinguished  by  the  2-celled 
ovary. — Bentli. 

4.  lasioclada  (branchlets  velvety),  F.  v.  M.  Fraym.  ix.  148.  A shrub 
with  the  branchlets  and  inflorescence  hoary  pubescent.  Leaves  lanceolate, 
acuminate,  somewhat  thick  chartaceous,  2 to  Sin.  long,  oil-dots  crowded,  both 


Myrtus.} 


LI.  MYRTACEjE. 


649 


sides  glossy  ; petioles  conspicuous.  Bracteoles  at  tbe  apex  of  the  pedicels 
fugacious.  Pedicelsaxillary,  solitary.  Calyx-tube  1^  line;  lobes  semi-ovate  or 
semi-rotund,  about  1 line.  Petals  glabrous  on  the  back.  Filaments  scarcely 
exceeding  1 line ; anthers  cordate-rotund.  Style  capillary ; stigma  slightly 
dilated.  Fruit  3-celled,  crowned  by  the  calyx-lobes. 

Hab.:  Bellenden  Ker  Ranges,  JV.  Hill  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 

5.  IYE.  Hillii  (after  Walter  Hill),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  275.  Scrub  Ironwoo 
of  southern  localities.  “ Kalaara,”  and  “ Mangoor,”  Barron  River,  J.  F.  Bailey. 
A shrub  or  small  tree,  glabrous  except  the  flowers,  the  brancblets  terete.  Leaves 
ovate,  acuminate,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole,  1 to  2in.  long,  very  smooth  and 
shining,  penniveined,  with  the  veins  irregularly  confluent  into  an  intramarginal 
one.  Pedicels  axillary,  slender,  \ to  fin.  long,  solitary  or  2 or  8 together  on  a 
very  short  common  peduncle.  Calyx  tomentose-pubescent ; tube  nearly  globular, 
under  1 line  long ; lobes  5,  broad,  rounded,  slightly  unequal  and  rather  longer 
than  the  tube.  Petals  5,  2J  lines  long,  pubescent  and  ciliate.  Ovary  pubescent 
on  the  top,  very  fleshy,  2-celled,  with  about  16  to  20  ovules  in  each  cell.  Fruit 
nearly  globular,  crowned  by  the  spreading  or  reflexed  calyx-lobes,  hut  not  seen 
ripe.  Seeds  several. 

Hab.:  Many  of  the  southern  river  scrubs. 

Wood  of  a grey  colour,  close-grained,  and  very  hard;  warps  in  drying — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql. 
Woods  No.  217. 

6.  1VI.  Becklerii  (after  Dr.  Beckler),  F.  v.  M.  Fraym.  ii.  85  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  275.  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  ovate  or 
ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate,  cuneate  at  the  base,  1 to  2in.  long,  rather  thick, 
penniveined  or  obscurely  triplinerved,  the  lateral  nerves  scarcely  conspicuous. 
Peduncles  solitary,  axillary,  filiform,  rarely  above  -|in.  long,  with  very  minute 
bracteoles  a short  distance  from  the  flowers.  Calyx  glabrous  ; lobes  5,  short  and 
broad.  Petals  white,  ovate,  about  3 lines  long.  Ovary  3-celled,  with  8 to  10 
ovules  in  each  cell  in  2 rows;  stigma  slightly  peltate.  Fruit  globular,  about  2 
lines  diameter.  Seeds  several,  flat,  nearly  orbicular,  the  testa  minutely  granulate- 
reticulate. 

Hab.:  Southern  scrubs. 

7.  M.  Bidwillii  (after  J.  C.  Bidwill),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  2/5.  A shrub  or 
small  tree,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  broadly  ovate  but  usually  contracted  into  a 
long  lanceolate  obtuse  point,  cuneate  at  the  base,  on  a short  broad  petiole,  2 to 
3in.  long,  finely  and  distantly  penniveined,  coriaceous  and  very  smooth  and 
shining.  Flowers  much  more  numerous  than  in  M.  racemulosa,  in  short  loose 
racemes,  clustered  in  the  axils,  the  pedicels  generally  in  opposite  pairs  along  the 
rhachis,  with  a cluster  of  5 at  the  end.  Calyx-tube  short ; lobes  5 or  rarely  4, 
spreading  to  a little  more  than  1 line  diameter.  Petals  usually  5,  sometimes  4 or 
6,  line  diameter,  minutely  ciliolate.  Stamens  much  more  numerous  than  in 
M.  racemulosa,  and  covering  half  the  radius  of  the  flat  disk.  Ovary  completely  2- 
celled,  with  a small  cluster  of  ovules  in  each  cell. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill. 

Some  specimens  of  Dallachy’s,  from  Port  Denison,  with  less  acuminate  leaves,  appear  to 
belong  to  the  same  species,  But  are  in  bud  only. — Benth. 

8.  WE.  racemulosa  (inflorescence  sometimes  racemose),  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  276.  A small  tree  with  a smooth  grey  bark,  quite  glabrous,  tbe  brancblets 
terete  or  slightly  flattened.  Leaves  ovate,  obtuse  or  shortly  acuminate,  rounded 
or  scarcely  cuneate  at  the  base,  1£  to  2iin.  long,  penniveined,  with  a few  of  the 
veins  more  prominent,  the  lower  ones  very  oblique,  and  the  lowest  pair  sometimes 
forming  an  intramarginal  one  nearly  to  the  end.  Pedicels  slender,  usually  5 or  7 


LI.  MYRTACEjE. 


[Myrtus. 


650 

in  a loose  axillary  raceme,  not  exceeding  the  leaves,  the  terminal  one  short,  the 
lateral  ones  longer,  solitary  and  opposite,  and  sometimes  2 racemes  in  each  axil. 
Bracteoles  minute,  close  under  the  flower.  Calyx  glabrous ; tube  somewhat 
turbinate,  under  1 line  long ; lobes  5,  broad,  about  as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  5, 
white,  ciliate,  fully  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  numei’ous,  as  in  all 
Myrti,  but  occupying  only  the  margin  of  the  disk.  Ovary  2-celled,  with  12  to  16 
ovules  in  each  cell,  on  a broad  placenta,  the  dissepiments  scarcely  complete  to  the 
top.  Fruit  globular,  about  2 lines  diameter,  crowned  by  the  calyx-limb.  Seeds 
1 or  2 or  sometimes  as  many  as  25,  nearly  globular  or  reniform  ; testa  hard. 
Embryo  very  long,  irregularly  twisted  or  doubly  folded  or  involute,  the  radicular 
end  thickened,  the  cotyledons  very  small. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  R.  Brawn;  Port  Denison,  Fitzalan;  Edgecombe  and  Rockingham  Bays, 
Dallachy. 

Wood  of  a close  grain,  tough ; warps  in  drying. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  217a. 

Var.  conferta.  Racemes  short,  almost  reduced  to  the  clusters  of  ,1/.  acmenioides,  but  the 
venation  of  the  leaves  as  in  M.  racemulosa.  —Port  Denison,  Fitzalan. 

9.  JVC.  acmenioides  (Acmena-like),  F.  v.  M.  Frayrn.  i.  77;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  276.  A tree  of  20  to  40ft.,  quite  glabrous,  with  a reddish  bark.  Leaves  ovate, 
acuminate,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole,  1^  to  nearly  3in.  long,  scarcely  shining, 
finely  penniveined,  with  the  veins  much  more  regular  and  diverging  than  in  M. 
racemulosa,  confluent  in  a fine  intramarginal  one.  Pedicels  rather  firm,  3 to  4 
lines  long,  usually  several  together  in  the  axils  or  at  the  old  nodes,  in  a cluster  or 
short  raceme,  on  a very  short  common  peduncle.  Bracteoles  minute,  deciduous, 
close  under  the  flower.  Calyx-tube  broad,  about  1 line  long ; lobes  5,  broad, 
obtuse,  shorter  than  the  tube,  all  equal  or  the  inner  one  larger  with  petal-like 
margins.  Petals  5,  more  or  less  ciliate,  the  outermost  about  2 lines  diameter,  the 
others  rather  smaller.  Stamens  scarcely  any  longer  than  the  petals.  Ovary 
2-celled,  with  about  12  to  16  ovules  in  each  cell  on  a 2-lobed  placenta.  Fruit 
about  2 lines  diameter,  usually  crowned  by  the  calyx-lobes.  Seeds  few  and  some- 
times only  one,  globular,  reniform  or  hemispherical ; testa  hard,  smooth  and 
shining.  Embryo  long,  spirally  involute,  the  radicular  end  thickened;  cotyledons 
very  small. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  Wide  Bay,  and  Rockhampton 

10.  1VI.  fragrantissima  (very  fragrant),  F.  c.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  277.  A'  shrub  or  tree,  the  young  shoots  slightly  hoary.  Leaves  very  shortly 
petiolate,  broadly  ovate,  1 to  2in.  long,  glabrous,  penniveined,  without  any 
intramarginal  vein.  Flowers  small,  few,  in  short  pedunculate  axillary  racemes, 
with  the  terminal  one  sessile,  or  the  pedicels  solitary  and  l-flotvered  at  the  base 
of  the  shoots.  Flowers  smaller  than  in  the  other  species  and  apparently  all 
4-merous.  Calyx  pubescent,  the  tube  nearly  globular,  about  1 line  diameter ; 
lobes  4,  rather  shorter  than  the  tube.  Petals  4,  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes. 
Ovary  2-celled,  with  rather  numerous  ovules  crowded  on  the  small  placenta; 
stigma  small.  Fruit  not  seen. 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 

The  seed  being  unknown,  the  genus  of  this  plant  must  be  uncertain,  but,  notwithstanding  its 
4-merous  flowers,  it  has  in  other  respects  much  more  the  aspect  of  a Myrtus  than  of  a Eugenia. — 
Benth. 

11.  ME.  Shepherdi  (after  T.  Shepherd),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ix.  148.  A 
glabrous  shrubby  plant,  the  branchlets  somewhat  terete.  Leaves  coriaceous, 
broad  or  orbicular-ovate,  obtuse-acuminate,  2 to  3in.  long,  1J  to  2in.  broad,  green 
and  glossy  on  both  sides,  cuneate  at  the  base,  thinly  and  distantly  penniveined  ; 
petioles  shortish.  Peduncles  axillary,  almost  lin.  long  or  sometimes  wanting  ; 
pedicels  6 to  12  lines  long.  Bracteoles  at  the  top  subulate,  minute,  at  length 
deciduous.  Calyx-lobes  5 or  4,  unequal,  and  like  the  petals  silky  on  the  inside, 


651 


Myrtus.]  LI.  MYRTACE^E. 

roundish,  1 to  1^  line  broad.  Petals  2 to  3 lines  long,  almost  round,  glabrous 
outside.  Stamens  about  as  long  as  the  corolla ; anthers  renate-rotund.  Style 
somewhat  short,  setaceous  ; stigma  very  small  ; ovary  2-celled.— F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallachy  (F.  v.  M.) 

12.  nitida  (leaves  shining),  J.  F.  Gviel.  Syst.  792;  Britten  in  Jour n.  of 
Bot.  xxxvii.  278.  A glabrous  tree.  Leaves  attaining  a length  of  3in.  and  a 
breadth  of  lAin . ; petioles  short,  mostly  ovate-lanceolate,  bluntly  protracted  at  the 
point,  the  base  cuneate,  margins  somewhat  undulate,  upper  surface  dark-green 
and  shining,  less  so  on  the  under  surface  ; primary  veins  rather  distant, 
moderately  prominent,  oil-dots  copious.  Pedicels  attaining  lin.  in  length, 
capillary,  few  or.  several  in  the  axils,  some  on  compressed  thin  peduncles. 
Flowers  hardly  exceeding  2 lines  long.  Calyx-lobes  4,  semiovate  or  semiorbicular, 
and  conspicuously  ciliolate.  Petals  almost  glabrous,  as  long  again  as  the  calyx- 
lobes.  Anthers  orbicular  or  cordate- ovate,  brownish.  Disk  glabrous.  Ovary 
2-celled.  Fruit  nearly  globular,  about  4 lines  diameter,  usually  1 -seeded  ; 
pericarp  very  thin,  seed  almost  globular,  nearly  3 lines  diameter,  testa  smooth, 
shining,  cartilaginous  ; embryo  forming  only  1 coil,  but  at  one  end  somewhat 
protruding  beyond  the  curvature. — Myrtus  wonosperma,  Yict.  Nat.  May  1892  ; 
Syzgium  tuciilens,  Gsert.  Fruct.  i.  167,  t.  xxxiii.;  Eugenia  lucida,  Banks  (and  Sol.) 
according  to  J.  Britten  l.c. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  IF.  Persich. 

Sap  said  to  be  extremely  acrid. — F.  v.  M.  l.c 

13.  M.  exaltata  (lofty  growth),  Bait.  Bot.  Bull.  viii.  A tree  of  from  80 
to  100ft.  in  height,  furnishing  a good  timber.  Bark  on  the  branchlets  loose, 
brownish.  Leaves  glossy,  irregularly  opposite  or  alternate,  ovate  with  often  long 
tail-like  points,  2 to  3in.  long,  ljin.  broad,  on  rather  slender  petioles  of  about 
3 lines,  the  primary  veins  very  slender,  numerous,  parallel,  oblique,  joining  in  an 
intramarginal  one  more  or  less  distant  from  the  edge,  the  intermediate  veinlets 
few  and  distant.  Oil-dots  minute.  No  flowers  seen.  Fruit  in  short,  stout 
racemes  in  the  upper  axils,  globular,  about  5 lines  diameter,  of  a pink  colour  and 
fleshy  consistence,  containing  so  far  as  could  be  observed  (the  fruit  being  in  bad 
condition)  but  a solitary  seed. 

Hab.:  Scrubs  about  the  Barron  River. 

The  fruit  used  for  jam-making. — E.  Cowley. 

14.  metrosideros  (Metrosideros-like),  Bail.  3rd  S-uppl.  Syn.  Ql.  FI. 
27.  Tree  30  or  40ft.  high,  trunk  often  crooked,  1 to  14ft.  diameter,  bark 
thick  and  loose  on  the  outside  ; head  spreading  and  foliage  very  dense ; branchlets 
and  leaf  petioles  silky-hairy.  Leaves  ovate,  with  long  acuminate  points,  mostly 
under  lin.  long,  glabrous  except  while  very  young,  coriaceous,  the  midrib  alone 
showing,  glossy  on  the  upper,  pale  and  closely  dotted  with  minute  dots  on  the 
under  side  ; petioles  2 lines  long. 

Hab.:  This  and  the  Leptospermum  wooroonooran  are  the  only  two  large  trees  on  the  south  peak 
of  Bellenden  Ker.  No  flowers  or  fruit  have  been  obtained.  I have  placed  it  under  Myrtus,  but 
it  strongly  reminds  one  of  some  of  the  New  Zealand  Metrosideros. 


26.  RHODAMNIA,  Jack. 

(Rose-like.) 

(Monoxora,  Wight.) 

Calyx-tube  ovoid  or  nearly  globular,  not  produced  above  the  ovary  ; lobes  4, 
usually  persistent.  Petals  4,  spreading.  Stamens  numerous,  in  several  series, 
free ; filaments  filiform  ; anthers  versatile,  with  parallel  cells,  opening  longi- 
tudinally. Ovary  1 -colled,  with  2 parietal  placentas,  each  with  several  ovules  ; 


652 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


[Rhodamnia. 


style  filiform  ; stigma  usually  peltate.  Berry  globular,  usually  crowned  by  the 
calyx-limb.  Seeds  usually  few,  reniform-globular  or  variously  compressed ; 
testa  hard;  embryo  horseshoe-shaped,  with  a long  radicle  and  very  small 
cotyledons. — Shrubs  or  small  trees.  Leaves  opposite,  3-nerved  or  triplinerved. 
Flowers  usually  small,  the  pedicels  clustered  in  the  axils  or  forming  very  short 
racemes.  Bracteoles  small,  deciduous. 

The  genus  is  spread  over  tropical  Asia,  and  comprises  about  a dozen  published  species,  some 
of  which,  however,  will  probably  be  reduced  on  a careful  scrutiny.  The  4 Australian  ones 
appear  to  be  endemic,  although  it  is  possible,  when  better  known,  that  2 of  them  may  prove  to 
be  extreme  forms  of  the  most  widely  spread  among  the  Asiatic  ones.  The  1-celled  ovary,  with 
parietal  placenta,  readily  distinguishes  the  genus  from  all  other  Myrtea,  and  the  3-nerved  leaves 
are  only  in  this  genus  and  in  Rhodomyrtus. — Benth. 


Flowers  sessile  in  the  axils.  Leaves  acuminate,  mostly  above  3in.  long  . . 1.  if.  sessiliflora. 

Flowers  in  pedunculate  cymes.  Leaves  mostly  under  3in.  long. 

Leaves  acuminate,  3-nerved,  pubescent  underneath,  but  not  white.  Calyx 
glabrous  or  pubescent 2.  if.  trinervia. 

Leaves  obtuse,  triplinerved,  shining  above,  white  underneath.  Calyx 

very  tomentose 3.  if.  argentea. 

Leaves  on  somewhat  long  petioles,  the  under  side  at  first  densely  ferruginous- 

tomentose.  Calyx-lobes  reflexed  on  the  fruit 4.  if.  Blairiana. 


1.  It.  sessiliflora  (flowers  stalkless),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  277.  “ Koorka- 

bidgan,”  Barron  River,  J.  F.  Bailey.  Medium-sized  tree  ; branches  tomentose- 
pubescent.  Leaves  ovate,  acuminate,  mostly  3 to7in.  long,  3^in.  broad,  glabrous 
above,  more  or  less  tomentose-pubescent  underneath,  especially  on  the  nerves, 
triplinerved  and  reticulate.  Flowers  small,  usually  8 together,  sessile  in  the 
axils.  Bracteoles  small,  linear,  deciduous.  Calyx  densely  tomentose-pubescent, 
about  1 line  long ; lobes  orbicular  or  ovate,  obtuse,  unequal,  the  largest  about 
1 line  diameter.  Petals  line  diameter.  Stamens  rather  longer.  Ovules 
numerous,  in  3 or  4 irregular  rows  on  each  placenta.  Berry  small,  globular, 
pubescent,  with  1 to  4 or  from  that  to  16  seeds,  almost  1£  line  long,  the  calyx- 
lobes  deciduous. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy. 

Evidently  nearly  allied  to  the  common  R.  spectabilis,  Blume,  but  at  once  distinguished  by  the 
sessile  flowers  and  fruits. — Benth. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  close-grained,  and  tough. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  218a. 

2.  R.  trinervia  (3-nerved  leaves),  Blume  Mus.  Bot.  i.  79  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  278.  A tree  of  medium  size,  with  a lamellar  reddish  bark,  the  young  shoots, 
under  side  of  the  leaves,  and  inflorescence  more  or  less  velvety-pubescent,  but 
not  white.  Leaves  ovate-oblong  or  ovate-lanceolate,  acuminate,  glabrous  and 
much  reticulate  above,  prominently  3-nerved  from  the  base.  Peduncles  slender, 
axillary,  3 together  in  a cluster  or  on  a short  common  peduncle,  each  with  1 or 
rarely  3 flowers,  with  minute  bracteoles  under  the  calyx.  Calyx  pubescent  or 
nearly  glabrous  ; tube  about  1 line  long ; lobes  nearly  as  long.  Petals  twice  as 
long  as  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  shorter  than  the  petals.  Stigma  small.  Berry 
globular,  about  3 lines  diameter  or  rather  more,  with  few  or  with  rather  numerous 
seeds. — Myrtus  trinervia,  Sm.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  280;  Euyenia  (!)  trinervia, 
DC.  Prod.  iii.  279  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  3223 ; Monoxora  rubescens,  Benth.  in  Hook.  , 
Lond.  Journ.  ii.  219  ; Myrtus  melastomoides,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  76. 

Hab.:  Damp  woods,  Moreton  Bay,  and  in  the  interior,  A.  Cunningham,  Fraser,  W.  Hill. 

Wood  brown,  close-grained,  tou^h,  strong  and  durable  ; useful  for  house-building  and  many 
other  purposes. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  219. 

Var.  spongiosa.  This  northern  tree  differs  from  the  ordinary  forms  met  with  in  being  glabrous 
except  the  inflorescence,  and  in  the  smaller  branches  bearing  a more  or  less  thick,  white,  spongy 
clothing.  In  an  early  stage  of  growth  this  is  covered  by  a reddish  brittle  bark,  which  cracks 
off  early,  exposing  the  spongy  matter.  Hab.:  Tringilburra  Creek,  Bellenden  Ker  Expedition  ; 
Barron  River,  E.  Cowley. 


Rhodamnia.'] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


653 


3.  It.  argentea  (silvery  on  under  side  of  leaf),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  278.  A tall 
tree,  the  young  shoots,  under  side  of  the  leaves  and  inflorescence  more  or  less  silvery- 
white  with  a close  minute  tomentum.  Leaves  oval  or  elliptical,  obtuse,  narrowed 
at  the  base,  triplinerved,  with  transverse  veins  and  scarcely  reticulate,  2 to  3in. 
long,  smooth  and  shining  above.  Peduncles  axillary,  solitary  or  2 or  3 together, 
2 to  4 lines  long,  each  bearing  either  3 or  a trichotomous  cyme  of  5 to  9 flowers 
on  very  short  pedicels.  Calyx  tomentose  ; tube  about  1 line  diameter  ; lobes 
about  as  long  as  the  tube  but  rather  unequal.  Petals  slightly  tomentose,  fully 
twice  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  shorter  than  the  petals.  Ovules 
rather  numerous  to  each  placenta. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  (a  doubtful  form  with  acuminate  leaves,  longer  than  as 
above  described,  perhaps  distinct,  but  the  specimens  insufficient).  Also  among  Queensland 
woods,  Exhibition,  1862,  IF.  Hill. 

The  species  is  very  near  R.  cinerea,  Jack,  from  which  R.  spectabilis,  Blume,  and  several  others 
may  prove  not  to  be  specifically  distinct. — Benth. 

Wood  dark-brown,  close-grained,  hard,  tough  and  durable  ; a pretty  cabinet  wood. — Baileg's 
Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  220. 

4.  R.  Blairiana  (after  Dr.  J.  Blair),  F.  v.  M.  Fraym.  ix.  141.  An  erect 
slender  tree  of  70  to  80ft.,  with  a loose  fibrous  bark.  Leaves  on  rather  long 
petioles,  thin  coriaceous,  2 to  3in.  or  more  long,  8 to  16  lines  broad,  obtuse  at  the 
base,  broad  or  ovate-lanceolate,  upper  surface  nearly  or  quite  glabrous,  under  side 
ferruginous,  tomentose  on  the  young  growth,  nerved  like  a Zizyphus  or  Cinnamo- 
mum.  Peduncles  none  or  very  short ; pedicels  solitary  or  in  twos  or  threes, 
Jin.  or  less  long.  Bracteoles  linear  filiform,  1 to  2 lines  long.  Calyx-lobes  4, 
alternately  round  and  somewhat  acute,  about  1J  line  long.  Fruit  nearly  globose, 
ferruginous,  tomentose,  J to  fin.  long.  Seeds  2 or  3 lines  long. 

Hab.:  Mountains  about  Rockingham  Bay. 


27.  FENZLIA,  Endl. 

(After  Dr.  Fenzl.) 

Calyx-tube  ovoid,  not  produced  above  the  ovary  ; lobes  5,  acute,  persistent. 
Petals  5,  spreading.  Stamens  numerous,  in  several  series,  free  ; filaments 
filiform  ; anthers  versatile,  with  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary 
1-celled  with  a parietal  placenta,  or  2-celled  with  the  placentas  attached  to  the 
dissepiment,  with  2 or  3 superposed  ovules  in  each  cell ; style  filiform,  with  a 
small  stigma.  Drupe  ovoid  or  globular,  crowned  by  the  spreading  or  reflexed 
calyx-lobes,  the  epicarp  thin,  the  endocarp  thick  and  bony.  Seeds  1 or  2, 
separately  enclosed  in  the  endocarp ; testa  thin  ; embryo  very  long,  spirally 
involute,  the  outer  radicular  end  somewhat  thickened,  the  cotyledons  linear,  in 
the  centre  of  the  coil. — Shrubs,  more  or  less  hoary-tomentose.  Leaves  opposite, 
penniveined.  Flowers  pink,  solitary  and  pedicellate  in  the  axils,  with  a pair  of 
bracteoles  under  the  calyx. 

This  genus  is  limited  to  the  two  species  endemic  in  Australia. 

Leaves  usually  glabrous  above.  Calyx-tube  and  fruit  at  length  glabrous  or 

moderately  tomentose,  ovoid 1 . F.  obtusa. 

Leaves  tomentose  on  both  sides,  usually  small.  Calyx-tube  and  fruit  very 
tomentose,  globular • 2.  F.  retusa. 

1.  F.  obtusa  (leaves  obtuse),  Endl.  Atalcta,  19  t.  17  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
279.  A low  bushy  shrub,  the  young  shoots,  inflorescence,  and  under  side  of  the 
leaves  hoary-tomentose.  Leaves  petiolate,  obovate  or  oblong,  very  obtuse,  mostly 
f to  lin.  long,  coriaceous,  finely  penniveined,  smooth  and  shining  above.  Pedicels 
sometimes  very  short,  sometimes  3 to  4 lines  long,  with  a pair  of  subulate  brac- 
eoles  under  the  calyx.  Flowers  pink.  Calyx  tomentose,  the  tube  ovoid  oblong, 


654 


LI.  MYRTACE^E. 


[Fenzlia. 


about  1 line  long  ; lobes  narrow  lanceolate-subulate,  usually  longer  than  the  tube 
and  united  at  the  base  in  a short  open  limb.  Petals  obovate,  2 to  3 lines  long, 
pubescent  or  nearly  glabrous.  Stamens  shorter  than  the  petals.  Fruit  very  hard, 
ovoid,  2 to  3 lines  long,  glabrous  or  tomentose.  Seeds  usually  2 or  3. 

Hab.:  Shoalwater  Bay  Passage,  Broadsound,  &c.,  R.  Brown;  Cape  York,  M'Gillivraij,  IF. 
Hill;  islands  of  Torres  Straits,  Hutchinson,  C.  Moore;  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachi/ ; Russell 
River,  IF.  Hill, 

Var.  microphylla.  Leaves  3 to  4 lines  long. — Dividing  ranges  between  Thomson  and  Burdekin 
Rivers,  5.  Sutherland  (a  small  fragment  and  another  in  Bowman's  collection  in  Herb.  F.  Mueller). — 
Benth. 


2.  F.  retusa  (leaves  retuse),  Endl.  Atakta,  20  t.  18  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
279.  Very  near  F.  obtnsa,  but  much  more  stellate- tomentose.  Leaves  usually 
but  not  always  smaller,  mostly  under  -fin.  long,  in  the  original  specimens  narrow 
and  notched  at  the  end,  scarcely  losing  their  tomentum  on  the  upper  side. 
Pedicels  short.  Flowers  small.  Calyx-tube  more  globular  than  in  F.  obtnsa  and 
densely  tomentose,  the  lobes  shorter  than  the  tube.  Petals  tomentose  outside, 
not  so  much  contracted  at  the  base  in  our  specimens  as  represented  in  the  plate. 
Fruit  usually  almost  globular,  much  smaller  than  in  F.  obtnsa,  more  or  less 
tomentose. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Broivn ; Victoria  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. 


28.  DECASPERMUM,  Forst. 

(Fruit  ten-seeded.) 

Calyx-tube  campanulate,  not  at  all  or  scarcely  produced  above  the  ovary  ; lobes 
4 or  5.  Petals  4 or  5,  spreading.  Stamens  numerous,  in  several  series,  free  ; 
anthers  versatile,  with  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  4 or  5-celled, 
with  2 or  very  few  ovules  in  each  cell,  and  sometimes  each  cell  divided  into  two 
by  a spurious  dissepiment ; style  filiform,  the  stigma  in  the  perfect  flowers  peltate. 
Berry  globular,  crowned  by  the  calyx-lobes.  Seeds  few,  reniform-globose ; testa 
hard  ; embryo  horseshoe-shaped  or  circular,  with  a long  radicle  and  short  linear 
cotyledons. — Shrubs  or  small  trees.  Leaves  opposite,  penniveined.  Flowers 
small,  pedicellate  in  axillary  racemes,  often  forming  terminal  leafy  panicles, 
occasionally  polygamous. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  tropical  Asia,  especially  the  Indian  Archipelago  and  the  Pacific 
Islands,  the  Australian  species  apparently  identical  with  the  commonest  Asiatic  one.  It  is 
nearly  allied  to  Myrtus,  but  readily  distinguished  by  the  number  of  cells  to  the  ovary. — Benth. 

1.  D.  paniculata  (flowers  paniculate),  Knrz.  in  Journ.  Ag.  Soc.  Beng.  xlvi. 
A shrub  or  small  tree,  the  young  shoots  and  inflorescence  silky-pubescent. 
Leaves  ovate-lanceolate,  acutely  acuminate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  1 to  2in.  long, 
glabrous  above,  with  fine  scarcely  conspicuous  nearly  transverse  veins,  silky- 
pubescent  underneath  or  at  length  glabrous.  Flowers  smaller  than  in  other 
Australian  Myrtles,  the  racemes  usually  shorter  or  scarcely  longer  than  the  leaves, 
but  often  forming  an  elegant  leafy  panicle.  Calyx  very  silky-pubescent,  the  tube 
about  i line  long,  and  the  lobes  about  the  same  length.  Petals  twice  as  long  as 
the  calyx-lobes,  more  or  less  silky-pubescent.  Anthers  small,  nearly  globular. 
Berry  about  2 lines  diameter.  Seeds  few,  with  a hard  tubercular-rugose  almost 
bony  testa  ; cotyledons  nearly  one-third  the  length  of  the  embryo. — Nelitris 
paniculata,  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  279;  Wight,  Ic.  t.  521;  Myrtus  elachantha, 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  56. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  IF.  Hill ; Pine  woods.  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill. 

Common  in  the  Indian  Archipelago  up  to  the  Philippine  Islands  and  in  the  eastern  provinces 
of  India  to  Khasia. 

Var.  laxiflora.  Leaves  longer,  the  veins  more  or  less  transverse  (only  visible  in  the  old 
leaves).  Flowers  more  numerous,  in  looser  racemes  and  rather  larger,  the  calyx  glabrous  or 
very  slightly  pubescent.  Ovary  5-celled  with  5 to  7 ovules  in  each  cell  (usually  2 or  3 in  the 
common  form).  Fruit  not  seen.  Perhaps  a distinct  species. — Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy  (Benth.) 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


655 


29.  EUGENIA,  Linn. 

(After  Prince  Eugene  of  Saxony.) 

(Jossinia,  Comm.;  Jambosa,  DC.;  Syzygium,  Gcertn.;  Acmena,  DC.) 

Calyx-tube  from  globular  to  narrow-turbinate,  not  at  all  or  more  or  less  pro- 
duced above  the  ovary  ; lobes  4,  very  rarely  5,  from  large  and  imbricate  to  very 
short  and  scarcely  prominent  above  the  truncate  margin.  Petals  4,  very  rarely 
5,  either  free  and  spreading,  or  more  or  less  connivent,  or  connate  and  falling  off 
in  a single  calyptra.  Stamens  numerous,  in  several  series,  free  or  obscurely 
collected  in  4 bundleg ; anthers  versatile,  usually  small,  the  cells  parallel  or  very 
rarely  divaricate,  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  2-celled  or  very  rarely  (in  species 
not  Australian)  3-celled,  with  several  ovules  in  each  cell,  or  only  2 in  an  American 
section.  Fruit  a berry  or  sometimes  almost  a drupe,  or  nearly  dry  with  a fibrous 
rind.  Seeds  either  solitary  and  globose,  or  few  and  variously-shaped  by  compres- 
sion ; testa  membranous  or  cartilaginous  ; embryo  thick  and  fleshy,  with  a very 
short  radicle,  the  cotyledons  either  united  in  an  apparently  homogeneous  mass  or 
more  or  less  separable. — -Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  penniveined.  Flowers 
(in  the  Australian  species)  either  solitary  in  the  axils  or  in  lateral  or  terminal 
trichotomous  cymes  or  panicles. 

A most  numerous  genus,  spread  over  the  tropical  and  subtropical  regions  both  of  the  New  and 
the  Old  World.  The  genus  has  been  variously  subdivided  into  sections  or  genera  by  different 
botanists  according  to  whether  they  have  worked  chiefly  upon  American  or  upon  Asiatic  species. 
The  most  convenient  course,  however,  appears  to  be  that  proposed  by  Wight,  A.  Gray,  and 
others,  to  retain  under  the  genus  all  Myrtece  with  fleshy  fruits  and  thick  fleshy  cotyledons  with  a 
very  short  radicle,  except,  perhaps,  a very  few  American  species  with  very  different  floral 
characters. — Bentli. 

Sect.  I.  Eueug  eniae. — Pedicels  short,  1-flowered,  solitary  or  2 toyether  in  the  axils  or  at  the 
old  nodes.  Calyx-tube  more  or  less  produced  above  the  ovary,  the  border  entire  or  very  shortly 
sinuate-lobed,  or  with  more  prominent  but  very  deciduous  lobes.  Petals  more  or  less  coheriuy  in  a 
calyptra,  or  rarely  spreading  and  separately  deciduous. 

(This  section,  more  definitely  characterised  by  the  inflorescence  than  by  the  calyx,  comprises 
only  a few  of  the  Old  World  species  but  very  numerous  American  ones,  and,  according  to  the 
views  of  those  who  have  studied  chiefly  American  Myrtacea,  should,  with  other  species  having 
a racemose  or  clustered  (not  trichotomous  or  cymose)  axillary  inflorescence,  constitute  the  whole 


genus  Eugenia,  to  the  exclusion  of  Syzygium  and  Jambosa. — Benth. 

Leaves  1 to  l^in.  long,  ovate  orbicular  or  almost  rhomboid 1 . E.  carissoides. 

Leaves  2in.  long,  broadly  ovate.  Flowers  2 in  each  axil.  Fruit  globose, 

torulose 2 ,*E.  unijlora. 


Sect.  II.  Syzyg’ium. — Flowers  in  trichotomous  panicles  or  cymes.  Calyx-tube  more  or  less 
produced  above  the  ovary,  the  border  entire  or  very  shortly  sinuately-lobed,  or  with  more  prominent 
but  very  deciduous  lobes.  Petals  more  or  less  cohering  in  a calyptra  and  falling  off  together,  or 
rarely  spreading  and  separately  deciduous. 

(These  species  are  all  natives  of  the  Old  World,  although  a very  few  have  in  some  measure 
become  naturalised  in  some  parts  of  tropical  America.  The  section  is  often  considered  as  a 
genus,  but  there  are  too  many  species  in  which  the  character  derived  from  the  calyx  and  petals 


is  doubtful  or  variable  to  allow  of  its  being  distinctly  separable  from  Jambosa. — Benth.) 

Flowers  in  loose  panicles,  terminal  or  in  the  upper  axils. 

Panicles  corymbose.  Petals  cohering.  Anther-cells  divaricate. 

Fruit  white  or  purplish,  crowned  by  the  circular  sear  of  the  calyx-rim  3.  E.  Smithii. 
Fruit  crimson,  globular,  ljin.  diameter,  crowned  by  the  circular  scar 

of  the  calyx-rim  and  minute  calyx-teeth 4,  E.  hemilampra. 

Fruit  white,  round  or  transversely  oval,  1 to  2in.  diameter  ; circular 

scar  of  the  calyx-rim  4 to  8 lines  diameter.  Seeds  lor  2.  ...  5.  E.kuranda. 

Fruit  hard,  dark,  globose,  2 or  more  inches  diameter,  crowned  by  the 

wide  circular  scar  of  the  calyx-rim.  Seed  solitary 6 . E.  gustavioides. 

Fruit  depressed-globular,  £ to  lin.  diameter,  the  scar  of  the  calyx- 

rim  sometimes  not  prominent 7.  E.  Ventenatii. 

Panicles  reduced  to  a short  dense  corymb  or  head.  Buds  long,  slender, 
and  clavate.  Stamens  very  short.  Leaves  narrow 8 . E.  leptantha. 

Panicles  trichotomous,  divaricate.  Buds  nearly  globular.  Fruit  juicy, 

red,  roundish  or  oblong 9.  E.  Jambolana. 

Peduncles  axillary  and  terminal.  Flowers  clavate  in  the  bud,  0 to  8 

lines  long.  Stamens  £in.  long 10.  E,  carynantha. 


656 


LI.  MYRTACEJL 


[Eugenia. 


Sect.  III.  Jambosa,.— Flowers  in  trichotomous  panicles  or  cymes.  Calyx-tube  more  or  less 
produced  above  the  ovary , prominently  lobed ; the  lobes  usually  persistent.  Petals  free  and 
spreading. 

(This  section,  like  Syzyyium , is  limited  to  the  Old  World,  excepting  where  naturalised  from 
cultivation. — Benth.) 


Flowers  in  divaricate  trichotomous  cymes  or  panicles,  lateral  on  the  stem. 

Fruit  oval,  usually  white,  nearly  2in.  long II.  E.  cormiflora. 

Flowers  on  the  thick  branches,  in  short  stout  trichotomously-branched 
panicles.  Calyx-tube  white,  longitudinally  corrugated.  Fruit  ovoid, 

3Jin.  long,  pinkish-white 12.  E.  Hislopii. 

Peduncles  terminal.  Cymes  of  few  large  fragrant  flowers.  Fruit  bright- 

red,  globose,  about  ljin.  diameter .*  . 13.  E.  Hodgkinsonim. 

Calyx-tube  turbinate,  about  2 lines  long.  Stamens  scarcely  above  Jin. 

long.  Fruit  nearly  globular,  red 14.  E.  Tierneyana. 

Flowers  large,  in  terminal  panicles. 

Leaves  broad,  obtuse,  coriaceous.  Calyx-tube  sessile,  about  3 lines 

long ; lobes  short.  Fruit  white,  large 15.  E.  grandis. 

Leaves  about  3in.  long,  ovate-lanceolate.  Fruit  about  lin.  diameter, 

red,  1-seeded 16.  E.  Johnsoni. 

Leaves  large.  Calyx-tube  5 lines  long,  tapering  into  a thick  pedicel. 

Fruit  globose  or  oblong,  2in.  or  more  long 11.  E.  suborbicularis. 

Flowers  in  dense  terminal  cymes.  Calyx-tube  narrow-clavate.  Stamens 

purple,  about  lin.  long.  Leaves  long 18.  FI.  Wilsonii. 

Flowers  in  terminal  corymbose  cymes  or  elongated  bi-trichotomous  panicles, 

1 to  ljin.  long  in  the  axils.  Calyx-tube  with  pedicel  3 lines  long.  Style 

slender,  slightly  exceeding  the  stamens 19.  E.  fibrosa. 

Bark  peeling  off  in  thin  papery  cinnamon-brown  flakes.  Leaves  lanceo- 
late, 2 to  3in.  long.  Fruit  transversely  oval,  succulent,  2in.  broad, 

ljin.  high 20.  E.  Bungadinnia. 

Leaves  long,  narrow,  very  obliquely  and  irregularly  veined.  Fruit  pear- 

shaped,  red  or  rosy,  1 to  ljin.  long 21.  E.  eucalyptoides. 

Flowers  few  in  axillary  cymes.  Calyx-lobes  large.  Fruit  red,  ovoid  or 

globular,  crowned  by  the  calyx-limb 22.  E.  p>aniculata. 

Leaves  very  prominently  punctate.  Flowers  in  terminal  or  axillary 

short  panicles.  Fruit  bright-red,  fin.  diameter,  lobed  at  top  ....  23.  E.  punctulata. 
Leaves  under  3in.  long,  J to  fin.  broad.  Flowers  few,  in  short  head-like 

racemes.  Stamens  under  3 lines  long  24.  E.  sordida. 

Leaves  3 to  5in.  long,  J to  lin.  broad,  blunt-lanceolate.  Panicle  terminal. 

Calyx  somewhat  hoary ; lobes  1 line  long.  Petals  twice  as  long. 

Stamens  twice  as  long 25.  E.  macoorai. 

Leaves  1J  to  2 Jin.  long,  about  ljin.  broad,  the  points  much  protracted. 

Panicle  thyrsoid.  Flowers  small.  Calyx-lobes  roundish.  Petals  twice 

as  long  as  calyx-lobes 26.  E.  Luehmanni. 

Flowers  sessile,  small,  in  corymbose  terminal  panicles.  Calyx  turbinate- 

campanulate,  under  2 lines  long,  5-lobed 21.  E.  Angophoroides. 

Flowers  in  slender  trichotomous  cymes,  opposite  on  young  shoots,  or  in 

terminal  pairs.  Calyx-lobes  very  small 28.  E.  oleosa. 

Leaves  sessile,  1 to  2Jin.  long,  with  long  point*  Flowers  small,  from  2 
to  4 together  between  terminal  leaves.  Petals  1J  line.  Stamens  4 

lines  long.  Fruit  red 29.  E.  apodophylla. 

Branchlets  4-angled.  Leaves  elliptic-lanceolate.  Peduncles  4-angular. 

Petals  hardly  expanding.  Fruit  small,  globular,  1-seeded 30.  E.  hedraiophylla. 

Branchlets  nearly  terete. 

Leaves  oblong-lanceolate,  veins  immersed,  2 to  4in.  long,  glaucous, 

young  growth  scarlet.  Flowers  in  cymes  or  racemes 31.  E.  cryptophlebia. 

Leaves  broad,  almost  triplinerved.  Flowers  white,  remarkable  for 

their  long  slender  stamens 32.  E.  Dallachiana. 


1.  E.  carissoides  (Carissa-like),  F.  v.  M.  Frat/m.  iii.  130;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  282.  A shrub,  with  short  divaricate  glabrous  branches.  Leaves 
shortly  petiolate,  ovate  orbicular  or  almost  rhomboidal,  very  obtuse,  f to  ljin. 
long,  coriaceous,  irregularly  penniveined  and  loosely  reticulate.  Flowers  solitary 
or  2 together  at  the  old  nodes,  nearly  sessile  or  on  pedicels  2 or  more  lines  long. 
Calyx  glabrous  or  minutely  pubescent ; tube  campanulate,  about  1 line  long,  not 
produced  above  the  ovary  ; lobes  4,  nearly  orbicular,  persistent,  about  as  long  as 
the  tube.  Petals  4,  spreading  and  falling  off  separately.  Anthers  short.  Ovules 


Eugenia..] 


LI.  MYRTACE/E. 


657 


rather  numerous.  Berry  globular,  red,  of  agreeable  acid  flavour,  3 to  4 lines 
diameter,  and  1 -seeded,  or  oblong  with  2 superposed  seeds,  or  broader  than  long 
or  somewhat  didymous  with  2 collateral  seeds,  crowned  by  the  calyx-lobes. — 
E.  hypospodia,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  15. 

Hab.:  Northumberland  Islands,  R.  Brown;  Cape  York.  M'Gillivray ; common  on  rocks  at 
Port  Denison  and  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy  ; and  other  similar  localities  in  the  tropics. 

The  species  is  very  nearly  allied  to,  and  perhaps  not  really  distinct  from,  E.  rariflora,  Benth. 
in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  ii.  221 ; A.  Gray,  Bot.  U.S.  Expl.  Exped.  i.  514,  t.  60,  a species  widely 
spread  over  the  S.  Pacific  Islands,  and  differing  chiefly,  as  far  as  known,  in  its  much  larger 
fruit. — Benth. 

2.  *E.  uniflora  (one-flowered),  Linn.  Brazilian  Cherry.  A bushy,  tall 
shrub.  Leaves  almost  sessile,  ovate,  sublanceolate,  glabrous,  rather  thin  and 
pellucid-punctate.  Pedicels  axillary,  usually  solitary  and  1 -flowered,  shorter  than 
the  leaves.  Calyx-lobes  4-reflexed.  Fruit  globose-torulose. 

Hab.:  This  South  American  plant  is  met  with  in  some  localities  as  a stray  from  cultivation. 

3.  E.  Smithii  (after  Sir  J.  E.  Smith),  Poir.  Diet.  Sup  pi.  iii.  126;  Benth.  FL 
Amtr.  iii.  282.  A tree,  sometimes  small  and  slender,  but  attaining  in  some 
places  a considerable  height,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  petiolate,  from  ovate  to 
ovate-oblong  or  ovate-lanceolate,  obtuse  or  more  or  less  acuminate,  narrowed  at 
the  base,  mostly  2 to  3in.  long,  smooth  and  finely  penniveined.  Flowers  small 
and  numerous,  in  a terminal  trichotomous  panicle,  sometimes  corymbose  and 
shorter  than  the  leaves,  sometimes  longer  and  more  pyramidal.  Bracts  minute 
and  deciduous.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  about  1 line  long,  the  free  part  very  much 
broader  ; lobes  either  all  very  short  broad  and  scarcely  prominent,  or  1 or  2 
rather  larger  almost  petal-like  and  deciduous.  Real  petals  4,  united  in  a small 
flat  very  deciduous  calyptra.  Stamens  scarcely  1 line  long  ; anthers  small,  with 
distinct  globular  divaricate  cells.  Ovules  rather  numerous.  Fruit  white  or 
purple,  globular,  J to  ^-in.  diameter,  crowned  by  the  circular  prominent  calyx- 
rim  ; endocarp  thick  and  hard.  Cotyledons  closely  combined. — F.  elliptica,  Sm. 
in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  iii.  281,  not  of  Lam.;  Bot.  Mag.  t.  1872;  Myrtus  Smithii, 
Spreng.  Syst.  ii.  487  ; Acmena  iiorihunda,  var.  2,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  262;  Bot.  Mag.  t. 
5480  (wrong  as  to  the  petals)  ; Syzygium  brachynemum,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  59 
and  PI.  Viet.  Suppl.  t.  18  (the  petals  not  quite  correct) ; probably  also  Acmena 
Kincjii,  G.  Don,  Gard.  Diet.  ii.  851. 

Hab.:  Cape  York,  IF.  Hill;  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy  ; Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v. 
Mueller ; Bunya  Mountains  and  many  other  southern  localities. 

The  anthers  with  divaricate  cells  are,  so  far  as  hitherto  observed,  exceptional  in  the  genus. — 
Benth. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  close-grained,  and  tough ; warps  in  drying. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  ! Foods 
No.  221. 

4.  E.  hemilampra  (one  face  of  leaf  glossy),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  ix.  145  (name 
proposed)  ; Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  ix.  In  Moore  and  Betche’s  Handb.  of  the  FI.  of 
N.S.  W.,  207,  it  is  also  referred  to  as  a probable  form  of  F.  Smithii,  but  no  description 
seems  ever  to  have  been  published  of  the  flowers  or  fruit.  A tree  of  large  size, 
having  a stem  diameter  of  from  1J  to  3ft.;  the  branchlets  frequently  flattened 
and  dark-coloured.  Leaves  lanceolate  or  elliptical,  obtusely  acuminate  or  almost 
pungent,  3 to  5in.  long  ; veins  fine,  numerous,  parallel,  very  oblique,  joining  in 
an  intramarginal  one  near  the  edge  ; under  side  more  or  less  light-coloured ; 
upper  side  dark-green.  Oil-dots  only  visible  before  a strong  light,  much  more 
obscure  and  very  minute  in  the  southern  plant,  larger  but  still  somewhat  obscure 
in-  the  northern  specimens.  Flowers  very  small  and  numerous,  in  a terminal 
trichotomous  panicle,  which  is  more  developed  in  the  northern  than  in  the 
southern  examples.  Calyx-border  prominent ; teeth  very  miriute  and  obscure  in 
the  flower.  Petals  mostly  cohering  and  falling  off  together,  tomentose  ; the  whole 
calyptra  about  ^ line  diameter.  Stamens  twice  as  long  as  the  petals  ; filaments 


658 


LI.  MYRTACEJE. 


[Eugenia. 


liexuose.  Anthers  with  globular  divaricate  cells,  as  in  F.  Smithii.  Fruit  crimson, 
globular,  l^in.  diameter,  crowned  by  the  small  circular  scar  of  the  calyx-rim  and 
the  minute  calyx-teeth,  and  often  with  a few  stamens.  Cotyledons  as  in 
E.  Smithii. 

Hab.:  Johnstone  River  (flowering  specimens),  Dr.  Thos.  L.  Bancroft;  Eumundi  (fruiting 
specimens),  IF'.  Munro  Hull ; Evelyn,  Herberton,  J.  F.  Bailey. 

Fruit  useful  for  preserving,  being  fleshy  and  of  a sharp  acid  flavour. 

Wood  known  as  “ Scrub  Mahogany,”  of  a dark  colour,  hard,  and  according  to  Mr.  Mazlin  very 
durable. — J.  F.  Bailey,  Rep.  on  the  Timber  Trees  of  the  Herberton  District,  Se2>t.  1899. 

5.  E.  kuranda  (native  name  at  Barron  River),  Bail.  A tree  of  medium  size. 
Bark  thin  and  scaly;  the  branchlets  often  flattened.  Leaves  oblong  to  lanceolate, 
usually  tapering  much  towards  the  base  ; apex  more  or  less  obtusely  acuminate, 
texture  coriaceous.  The  flowers  in  short  cymes  upon  the  branches  below  the 
foliage.  Fruit  white,  round  or  transversely  oval,  from  1 to  2in.  or  even  more  in 
diameter  ; the  calyx-lobes  deciduous,  leaving  a saucer-like  depression  from  4 to  8 
lines  in  diameter.  Style  persistent ; pericarp  fleshy  ; endocarp  hard,  crustaceous. 
Seeds  usually  solitary,  or  2 in  the  oblate  fruits. 

Hab.:  Johnstone  River,  Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft;  Barron  River,  E.  Cowley. 

Wood  of  a flesh  colour,  close  in  grain,  stands  well  in  drying  ; suitable  for  house-building 
purposes. — Bailey’s  Cat.  QI.  Woods  No.  223  (then  supposed  to  be  a form  of  E.  Jambolana). 

6.  E.  gustavioides  (contour  of  fruit  like  that  of  a Gustavia),  Bail.  A very 
large  glabrous  tree  with  an  erect  straight  trunk  often  several  feet  in  diameter,  the 
branchlets  more  or  less  compressed.  Leaves  thin,  coriaceous,  about  5in.  long, 
2+in.  broad,  oblong,  lanceolate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  the  apex  often  acuminate  and 
twisted,  base  cuneate,  midrib  sharply  prominent,  lateral  nerves  slender,  looping 
far  within  the  margin  and  again  once  or  twice. between  that  and  the  edge  of  the 
leaf  ; petiole  about  |in.  long.  Fruit  globose,  attaining  2in.  in  diameter,  rind  of 
a dark  colour,  hard  and  dry,  crowned  by  the  wide  circular  scar  of  the  calyx-rim, 
endocarp  inseparable  from  the  rind,  containing  a solitary  globose  seed. — Q.  Agri. 
Journ.  vol.  v.  pi.  140. 

Hab.:  Near  Lake  Bavrine,  J.  F.  Bailey. 

7.  E.  Ventenatii  (after  E.  P.  Ventenat),  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  283.  A tall 
tree,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  petiolate,  oblong-lanceolate  or  rarely  ovate-lanceo- 
late, acuminate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  mostly  3 to  5in.  long,  finely  penniveined 
as  in  E.  Smithii.  Flowers  larger  than  in  that  species,  in  compound  thyrsoid  or 
oblong  panicles,  the  pedicels  short  but  slender  and  distinct.  Buds  nearly  globular. 
Calyx-tube  broadly  turbinate-campanulate,  about  lh  line  long,  the  adnate  portion 
very  short,  the  margin  truncate  with  4 lobes  or  teeth  very  short,  or  if  larger  and 
petal-like  falling  off  as  the  flower  expands.  Petals  4,  ovate,  concave,  under  1 
line  long,  usually  distinct  and  very  deciduous,  but  according  to  F.  v.  Mueller 
sometimes  cohering,  and  occasionally  there  is  an  inner  series  of  smaller  ones. 
Stamens  attaining  about  2 lines  ; anther-cells  parallel.  Ovules  about  10  in  each 
cell.  Fruit  depressed-globular  or  somewhat  urceolate,  often  exceeding  -|in.  in 
diameter,  1-seeded. — Metrosuleros  Jloribunda,  Vent.  Jard.  Malm.  t.  75,  not  of  Sm.; 
Syzygium  floribundum,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  58. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallacliy ; Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller,  II'.  Hill,  C. 
Stuart ; Ipswich,  Vernet ; also  in  11.  Brown’s  collection  without  a label. — Bentli. 

Wood  of  a grey  colour,  soft  and  easy  to  work  ; might  be  suitable  for  cabinet-work. — Bailey’s 
Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  222. 

8.  E.  leptantha  (flowers  slender),  Wight , lllustr.  ii.  15,  and  Ic.  t.  528; 
Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  283.  A tree  about  60ft.  high,  with  a smooth  bark,  glabrous 
but  pale,  or  the  inflorescence  hoary-pubescent.  Leaves  from  oval-elliptical  to 
oblong-lanceolate,  obtusely  acuminate,  narrowed  into  a very  short  petiole,  4 to 
5in.  long,  finely  penniveined.  Flowers  in  short  dense  raceme-like  cymes,  almost 


Eugenia.] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


659 


reduced  to  heads,  on  the  previous  year’s  wood,  either  in  the  axils  of  the  old  leaves 
or  at  the  nodes  of  the  denuded  branches,  the  peduncles  and  pedicels  very  short. 
Calyx-tube  5 to  6 lines  long,  very  narrow,  clavate,  glabrous  or  powdery-pubescent, 
the  free  part  short,  slightly  dilated,  obscurely  sinuate-toothed.  Petals  cohering 
and  falling  off  together  in  a small  calyptra.  Stamens  short.  Ovules  12  to  20  in 
each  cell.  Fruit  red,  in  loose  cymes. — Syzygium  lonyifioruw , Wall.  Cat.  Herb. 
Ind.  n.  8572  ; allied  to  F.  corynocarpa,  A.  Gray,  Bot.  of  Wilk.  Exped.  526,  t.  64. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Mackay,  and  Mt.  Dryander. 

The  species  is  also  found  in  the  Malayan  Peninsula. 

Wood  of  a grey  colour,  close-grained,  and  hard. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  22‘2a. 

Var.  parvifolia.  Tree  medium-sized.  Leaves  small,  with  long  acuminate  points.  Hab.:  John- 
stone River,  Dr.  T.  L.  Bancroft. — Wood  of  a grey  colour,  close-grained,  soft ; easily  worked ; 
suitable  for  flooring-boards  of  verandas.  Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  222b. 

9.  E.  Jambolana  (Jambos-like),  Lam.  Diet.  iii.  198  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
288.  A tall  shrub  or  tree,  attaining  sometimes  a considerable  size,  quite  glabrous. 
Leaves  oval-oblong,  obtuse  or  shortly  acuminate,  usually  4 to  6in.  long  and  2 to 
Bin.  broad,  but  sometimes  longer,  very  firm,  shining,  with  numerous  fine  pinnate 
veins  and  reticulate  between  them,  the  principal  ones  confluent  but  -not  forming  a 
regular  intramarginal  vein.  Flowers  not  large,  numerous,  in  broad  trichotomous 
panicles  lateral  on  the  old  wood  below  the  leaves,  the  ultimate  cymes  dense. 
Calyx  sessile,  turbinate-campanulate,  the  lobes  very  short  and  broad  at  the 
margin,  almost  entire  when  the  flower  is  fully  out.  Petals  cohering  and  falling 
off  together  in  a calyptra.  Berry  roundish,  from  the  size  of  a cherry  to  that  of  a 
pigeon’s  egg,  usually  with  a single  seed  ( Roxburgh). — Wight,  Illustr.  ii.  16,  and 
Ic.  t.  535,  624  ; Syzyyium  Jambolanum,  DC.  Prod.  ii.  259  ; Wight  and  Arn.  Prod. 
329,  with  the  synonyms  adduced ; Fityenia  Moorei,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  33. 

Hab.:  Albany  Island,  W.  Hill. 

Very  common  in  East  India  and  the  Archipelago,  where  the  fruit  is  much  eaten. 

10.  E.  corynantha  (flower-bud  club-shaped),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ix.  144.  A 
tall  tree,  branchlets  somewhat  terete.  Leaves  ovate,  2 to  3in.  long,  somewhat 
acuminate,  very  thinly  penninerved,  shortly  tapering  to  a short  petiole,  the  oil- 
dots  scattered  and  rather  obscure.  Peduncles  axillary  and  terminal,  short,  the 
short  branches  bearing  2 to  5 flowers,  clavate  in  the  bud.  Calyx-tube  clavate, 
6 to  8 lines  long,  somewhat  funnel-shaped  ; lobes  4,  about  1^  line  long,  roundish 
and  tardily  separating.  Petals  free,  not  adhering  together.  Stamens  about  ^in. 
long  ; anthers  narrow-oblong.  Style  setaceous  ; stigma  very  minute.  Ovary 
near  the  middle  of  the  calyx-tube. 

Hab.:  Nerang  Creek,  J.  Shirley. 

11.  E.  cormiflora  (stem  flowering),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  32;  Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  284.  White  Apple.  “ Moorool,”  Barron  River,  J.  F.  Bailey.  Often  a 
tall  erect  tree  with  a fine  head.  Leaves  ovate-elliptical  to  almost  oblong,  obtuse 
or  shortly  acuminate,  3 to  5in.  long,  narrowed  into  a petiole  often  |in.  long,  not 
very  thick,  the  principal  veins  rather  distant  and  uniting  irregularly  far  within 
the  margin.  Flowers  large,  in  short  trichotomous  cymes,  clustered  on  the  trunk 
not  above  3ft.  from  the  ground,  the  peduncles  and  pedicels  very  short.  Calyx- 
tube  urceolate,  nearly  +in.  long,  very  thick,  the  free  part  short,  dilated  at  the  top; 
lobes  4,  very  unequal,  the  largest  nearly  orbicular,  4 to  5 lines  broad.  Petals  4, 
free,  broad,  unequal,  the  largest  above  |in.  long.  Stamens  erect  and  more  rigid 
than  in  most  species,  the  outer  ones  above  lin.  long  ; anthers  oblong.  Ovary 
very  thick  and  fleshy,  with  2 small  cells,  each  with  about  8 ovules.  Fruit  ovoid- 
urceolate,  crowned  by  the  calyx-lobes,  nearly  2in.  long. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy ; Maryborough,  W.  Hill. 

The  species  appears  to  be  very  nearly  allied  to  K.  Malaccensis,  Linn  , common  in  India  and  the 
Archipelago. 

Wood  of  a dark  colour,  close-grained,  and  tough. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  224. 


060 


LI.  MYRTACE^E. 


[Eugenia. 


12.  E.  Ilislopii  (after  R.  Hislop),  Bail.  Ql.  Agri.  Journ.  v.  part  5. 
“ Walkaran,”  near  Cooktown,  Roth.  A tree  of  about  30ft.  in  height,  and 
a trunk  diameter  at  the  base  of  15in.;  branchlets  rather  crowded,  slender. 
Leaves  oblong-lanceolate,  about  2^in.  long  and  J to  lin.  broad  ; the  apex  more  or 
less  elongated,  but  blunt,  tapering  considerably  to  a petiole  of  about  £in.  long, 
upper  side  glossy,  under  side  somewhat  brownish  ; primary  nerves  rather  distant, 
looping  far  within  the  margin,  transverse  reticulate  veins  prominent,  oil-dots 
copious.  Flowers  in  short,  stout  dichotomously-branched  panicles,  ljin.  long, 
on  the  trunk  of  the  tree  from  near  the  base  to  the  height  of  about  10ft.;  the 
flowers  usually  in  pairs  at  the  ends  of  the  branches  of  the  panicle,  closely  sessile, 
or  by  the  elongation  of  the  branch  appearing  pedicellate.  Calyx-tube  white, 
campanulate,  about  5 lines  long,  longitudinally  corrugated  ; lobes  short,  broad, 
rounded.  Petals  white,  twice  or  more  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes,  rotundate  and 
much  imbricate.  Stamens  6 to  8 lines  long,  the  inner  ones  smaller.  Anthers 
oblong,  about  1 line  long.  Fruit  ovoid,  3£in.  long,  2|in.  broad,  white  with  a 
pink  blush,  very  soft  and  very  succulent. 

Hub.:  Near  Cooktown.  The  tree  does  not  grow,  so  far  as  at  present  known,  at  a lower  altitude 
than  1500ft.,  1 f.  Hislop  (Noth.) 

13.  E.  Hodgkinsoniae  (after  Miss  Maria  Hodgkinson),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  ix. 
145.  A small  tree,  the  branchlets  almost  terete.  Leaves  on  short  petioles,  ovate 
to  lanceolate-ovate,  chartaceous,  3 to  5in.  long,  1£  to  2in.  broad,  pale  on  the 
under  side,  somewhat  shortly  acuminate.  Oil-dots  few.  Peduncles  terminal, 
bearing  cymes  of  few  very  fragrant  white  flowers.  Calyx-tube  obconic-turbinate, 
lobes  4,  unequal,  roundish,  2 to  4 lines.  Petals  nearly  ^in.  long,  glabrous,  mem- 
branous towards  the  margins.  Stamens  almost  lin.  long.  Ovary  2-celled,  ovules 
numerous  in  each  cell.  Style  capillary,  about  lin.  long.  Stigma  very  minute  ; 
anthers  linear-elliptic.  Fruit  globose,  about  1+in.  diameter,  1 seeded,  bright-red, 
testa  somewhat  thick,  cotyledons  hemispherical. — E.  odoratimma,  Bail.;  E.  Fitz- 
geraldi,  F.  v.  M.  and  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  3. 

Hab.:  Summit  of  Blackall  Range,  Field  Naturalists.  Flowering  March. 

14.  E.  Tierneyana  (after  E.  Tierney),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  14  ; Benth.  El. 
Austr.  iii.  284.  A tree  of  60  to  70ft.,  with  an  ashy  smooth  bark  and  spreading 
branches  ( Dallachy),  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  elliptical-oblong  to  almost  obovate, 
shortly  and  obtusely  acuminate,  3 to  6in.  long,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole,  not 
very  thick,  the  primary  nerves  rather  distant  and  uniting  far  within  the  margin. 
Flowers  rather  large,  not  numerous,  in  loose  trichotomous  cymes  on  the  old 
wood,  in  the  axils  of  the  old  leaves  or  at  the  nodes  of  denuded  branches,  not 
exceeding  the  leaves  and  often  several  from  the  same  node.  Calyx-tube  turbinate, 
about  3 lines  long,  rapidly  contracted  into  a short  pedicel ; lobes  4,  orbicular, 
distinct,  unequal,  the  largest  nearly  2 lines,  the  smallest  scarcely  above  1 line 
diameter.  Petals  nearly  4 lines  diameter,  spreading  and  separately  deciduous. 
Stamens  half  as  long  again  as  the  petals.  Ovary  in  the  narrow  base  of  the  calyx, 
with  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell.  Fruit  globular,  red,  about  4-in.  diameter. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  and  many  other  tropical  localities. 

The  red  fruit  produced  in  large  quantities  and  makes  very  good  jam. 

The  species  is  very  near  allied  to  the  E.  Indian  E.  laurifolia,  Roxb.,  differing  chiefly  in  the 
leaves  narrowed  at  the  base. — Benth. 

15.  E.  grandis  (a  grand  species),  Wight,  lllustr.  ii.  17,  and  Ic.  t.  614  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  285.  White  Apple.  “ Waargoon-waargoon,”  Herberton 
district,  J.  F.  Baileg.  A large  and  handsome  tree,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  from 
broadly  oval  to  oval-oblong,  obtuse  or  obtusely  acuminate,  4 to  6in.  long,  very 
firm  and  shining  as  in  E.  Jambolana,  but  thicker,  and  the  veins  more  distant, 
forming  a continuous  intramarginal  nerve.  Flowers  rather  large  and  numerous, 


Fugenia.] 


LI.  MYRTACE^. 


661 


in  dense  trichotomous  cymes,  either  terminal  or  in  the  upper  axils.  Calyx-tube 
thick,  turbinate,  shortly  produced  above  the  ovary,  about  3 lines  long  ; lobes  4, 
broad  and  short  but  unequal,  wearing  oft'  after  flowering.  Petals  usually  spreading 
and  falling  off  separately.  Fruit  globular,  white,  1 to  2in.  diameter,  with  1 or  2 
seeds,  or  smaller  with  1 seed. — E.  cgmosa,  Roxb.  FI.  Ind.  ii.  402,  not  of  Lam.; 
E.firma,  Wall.  Cat.  Herb.  Ind.  n.  3603;  Syzygium  grande,  Walp.  Rep.  ii.  180; 
Jambosa  grandis  and  J.  firm  a , Blume,  Mus.  Bot.  i.  108;  Eugenia  fortis,  F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  v.  13. 

Hab.:  Lizard  Islands,  Banks  and  Solander ; Albany  Island,  W.  Hill:  Rockingham  Bay, 
Dallachy. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  the  eastern  provinces  of  India  and  the  Archipelago.  It  is 
placed  by  Wight  in  the  section  Syzygium  and  by  Blume  in  Jambosa,  and  is  in  some  respects 
intermediate  between  the  two. — Benth. 

Wood  light-brown,  close-grained,  hard,  and  tough  ; might  serve  for  staves  for  rum-casks ; 
suitable  for  building  purposes. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  226. 

16.  E.  Johnsoni  (after  Stephen  Johnson),  E.  v.  M.  Viet.  Nat.,  April  1892. 
A glabrous  tree  of  about  40ft.  in  height ; branchlets  almost  cylindric.  Leaves 
seldom  over  3in.  long  and  lfin.  broad,  often  smaller,  of  firm  consistence,  mostly 
ovate-lanceolate,  much  contracted  towards  the  blunt  summit,  gradually  narrowed 
into  a conspicuous  petiole,  rather  prominently  pinnate-veined  ; oil-dots  concealed. 
Inflorescence  2fin.  long  or  less  ; peduncles  slender,  axillary  or  terminal. 
Bracteoles  narrow,  fugacious.  Calyx  before  expansion  clavate-ovate ; tube 
smooth,  passing  gradually  into  the  pedicel ; lobes  4,  rather  large,  almost  semi- 
ovate.  Petals  not  much  larger  than  the  calyx-lobes.  Anthers  narrow-elliptic. 
Fruit  1-seeded,  from  fin.  to  about  lin.  in  diameter,  red  ; pericarp  rather  thick, 
of  subacid  and  aromatic  flavour.  Seed  turgidly  ovate,  its  cotyledons  one  above 
the  other.  The  unexpanded  flowers  resemble  those  of  some  Eucalypti,  and  impart 
to  this  species  a peculiar  appearance. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Mount  Bartle  Frere,  Stephen  Johnson. 

This  is  the  species  I alluded  to  in  my  report  of  the  botany  of  the  Bellenden  Her  Expedition  as 
a probable  form  of  E.  grandis,  but  then  no  fruit  was  obtainable. 

17.  E.  suborbicularis  (leaves  nearly  round),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  285. 
“ Oloorgo,”  Mitchell  River,  Palmer ; “ Pudginjacker,”  Bloomfield  River,  and 
“ Esie,”  Batavia  River,  Roth.  A tree  attaining  a considerable  size,  quite 
glabrous.  Leaves  broadly  obovate  or  almost  orbicular,  very  obtuse,  4 to  6in. 
long,  on  a rather  long  petiole,  coriaceous  but  not  so  thick  and  shining  as  in 
E.  grandis,  with  numerous  parallel  diverging  veins,  confluent  within  the  margin, 
and  finely  reticulate  between  them.  Flowers  large,  in  a short  terminal  tricho- 
tomous cyme.  Calyx-tube  narrow-turbinate,  7 to  8 lines  long,  broad  and 
campanulate  above  the  ovary ; lobes  4,  broad,  the  inner  ones  nearly  fin.  diameter, 
with  scarious  margins,  the  outer  ones  rather  smaller.  Petals  spreading  and 
separately  deciduous,  the  larger  outer  one  nearly  fin.  diameter.  Stamens  exceed- 
ingly numerous,  readily  separable  in  the  bud  into  4 parcels.  Ovules  ascending. 
Fruit  globose  or  oblong,  over  2in.  long. 

Hab.:  Cape  York  and  Endeavour  River,  W.  Hill;  N.E.  coast,  A.  Cunningham;  Somerset. 

Ripe  fruit  eaten. 

Wood  of  a dark-grey  colour,  with  peculiar  corky  concentric  rings  several  inches  asunder,  on 
which  account  the  natives  of  the  Johnstone  choose  the  trunks  of  this  tree  for  making  their 
canoes. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  227. 

18.  E.  Wilsonii  (after  E.  Wilson),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  12;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  285.  Glabrous.  Leaves  broadly  lanceolate,  acuminate,  5 to  6in.  long, 
rounded  at  the  base,  with  a short  petiole,  finely  and  transversely  penniveined. 
Flowers  large,  in  a short  dense  terminal  cyme  almost  contracted  into  a head. 
Calyx-tube  very  narrow-turbinate,  about  4 lines  long  ; lobes  4,  rounded,  about 
1 line  diameter  and  nearly  equal.  Petals  about  If  line  diameter,  separately 


062 


LI.  MYRTACErE. 


[Eugenia. 


deciduous.  Stamens  reddish-purple,  the  longer  ones  nearly  lin.  long.  Anthers 
small.  Ovary  about  half  the  length  of  the  calyx-tube,  concave  at  the  top  and 
scarcely  fleshy.  Ovules  numerous  in  each  cell,  in  two  rows,  ascending  from  a 
pendulous  placenta.  Fruit  ovoid,  about  £in.  long,  narrowed  at  the  top  and 
crowned  by  the  small  calyx-lobes.  Seeds  usually  2 or  B ; cotyledons  thick  and 
fleshy  but  separate. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay  and  many  other  localities  in  tropical  parts. 

Wood  of  a uniform  dark-brown  colour,  close-grained,  hard  and  tough  ; useful  for  building 
purposes,  mallets,  &c.  — Bailey’s  Cat.  ()!■  I Foods  No.  227a. 

19.  E.  fibrosa  (bark  fibrous),  Bail.  A slender  tree  with  a fibrous  bark  ; 
branchlets  terete  or  somewhat  angled  at  the  extremities,  the  bark  with  reddish  or 
brownish  lines,  more  or  less  cracked.  Leaves  elliptic-oblong,  tapering  at  each 
end,  3 to  4^in.  long,  1^  to  2in.  broad  at  the  centre;  the  apex  obtuse,  often 
elongated  ; petioles  2 to  4 lines  long,  the  parallel  lateral  veins  sometimes  distant, 
rather  faint,  confluent  not  far  from  the  margin,  the  reticulation  scarcely  visible. 
Flowers  in  a terminal  corymbose  cyme,  also,  in  some  of  the  lower  axils,  in 
elongated  bichotomous  or  trichotomous  slender- branched  panicles,  1 to  l^in. 
long;  calyx-tube  with  pedicel  about  3 lines  long;  lobes  4,  persistent,  oblong,  24 
lines  long,  1 line  broad,  somewhat  coriaceous  ; petals  same  form  as  calyx-lobes 
and  not  much  larger,  separately  deciduous.  Stamens  rather  numerous,  fila- 
ments very  slender,  flexuose,  7 or  8 lines  long.  Anthers  small  with  parallel 
cells.  Style  slender,  slightly  longer  than  the  stamens  ; stigma  minute.  Ovary 
in  the  narrow  base  of  the  calyx,  2-celled,  with  numerous  ovules  in  each.  Fruit 
not  seen. 

Hab.:  Somerset,  where  I saw  it  in  flower  June,  1897. 

20.  E.  Bungadinnia  (aboriginal  name  at  Somerset,  Jardine),  Bail.  Ql. 
Agri.  Journ.  Tree  of  from  30ft.  to  40ft.  in  height,  stem  diameter  about  3ft., 
bark  loose,  inclined  to  be  papery  ( F.  L.  Jardine).  Bark  upon  the  thick  branches 
peeling  off  in  very  thin  cinnamon-brown  papery  flakes ; branchlets  often 
flattened,  the  bark  dark,  hard  and  smooth.  Leaves  lanceolate,  obtusely  acuminate, 
tapering  from  above  the  middle  often  to  the  branch,  or  forming  a petiole  a few 
lines  long,  2 to  over  Bin.  long,  •§■  to  lin.  broad,  of  a somewhat  coriaceous  texture, 
the  parallel  lateral  veins  and  the  intermediate  anastomosing  veinlets  faintly 
prominent  and  joining  the  intramarginal  one  near  the  edge,  both  faces  dotted, 
the  under  side  rather  paler,  and  thus  the  dots  more  plainly  visible.  The  loose 
fruit  received  with  the  shoot-specimens  were  transversely  oval  or  oblong,  and 
measured  2in.  broad  and  14in.  high.  The  remains  of  flower  seen  on  the  fruit 
2 to  3 lines  diameter.  Calyx-lobes  4,  1 line  high,  1J  line  broad.  Stamens  seem 
to  be  in  bundles  of  2 or  3,  about  3 lines  long.  Style  stout,  about  6 lines  long. 
Fruit  examined  1-seeded. 

Hab.:  Somerset,  F.  L.  Jardine,  who  says  that,  as  this  is  one  of  the  first  fruits  to  ripen  and 
comes  at  a time  of  scarcity,  the  natives  almost  live  on  it. 

21.  E.  eucalyptoides  (Eucalypt-like),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  55  ; Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  285.  A tall  shrub  or  small  tree,  glabrous  and  somewhat  glaucous, 
with  pendulous  branches.  Leaves  lanceolate,  often  falcate,  4 to  6in.  long  or 
more,  narrowed  into  a very  short  petiole,  remotely  and  irregularly  penniveined 
and  reticulate,  the  principal  veins  more  or  less  confluent  at  some  distance  from 
the  edge.  Flowers  rather  large,  few,  in  compact  terminal  cymes.  Calyx-tube 
broadly  turbinate,  about  2 lines  long,  the  free  part  broad ; lobes  4,  broadly 
orbicular,  the  inner  larger  ones  almost  as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  orbicular,  the 
larger  outer  ones  fully  3 lines  diameter,  all  separately  deciduous.  Ovary  about 


Euyenia .] 


LI.  MYRTACEjE. 


GG8 


half  the  length  of  the  calyx  ; ovules  incurved,  acuminate.  Fruit  globular, 
1-seeded,  crowned  by  the  calyx  limb,  but  only  seen  young. — Jambosa  eucalyptoides, 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  226;  Ql.  Agri.  Journ. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River.  F.  Barclay  Millar. 

22.  E.  paniculata  (flowers  paniculate),  Bank s (and  Sol.) ; E.r.  Garin.  Frui  t. 
i.  167  t.  xxxiii.;  Nun.  Lain.  Encycl.  iii.  199  ; James  Britten  in  Journ.  of  But. 
xxxvii.  247.  A small  tree  or  evergreen  glabrous  shrub.  Leaves  petiolate,  vary- 
ing from  oval-oblong  or  almost  obovate  to  oblong-elliptical  or  almost  lanceolate, 
obtuse  or  acuminate,  2 to  3in.  long,  cuneate  or  narrowed  at  the  base,  finely  and 
almost  transversely  penniveined.  Peduncles  axillary,  lateral  or  terminating- 
short  leafy  shoots,  bearing  usually  3 or  5 flowers  but  sometimes  more,  in  a loose 
trichotomous  panicle.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  1A  to  nearly  2 lines  diameter ; lobes 
very  unequal,  the  largest  nearly  as  long  as  the  tube.  Petals  nearly  3 lines 
diameter,  spreading  and  separately  deciduous.  Outer  stamens  nearly  Mn.  long. 
Ovary  about  half  the  length  of  the  calyx-tube,  with  a cluster  of  8 to  10  ovules 
in  each  cell.  Fruit  red,  ovoid  or  nearly  globular,  crowned  by  the  calyx-limb. — 
Syzyyium  paniculatum,  Gaertn.  l.c.;  Myrtus  paniculata , .T.  F.  Gmel.  Syst.  792  ; 
Euyenia  myrti folia,  Sims,  Bot.  Mag.  t.  2230  ; Benth.  FI.  Aust.r.  iii.  236  ; Bot. 
Reg.  t.  627  ; Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  625  ; E.  australis,  Wendl.  in  Link,  Enum.  Hort. 
Berol.  ii.  28  ; Colla  in  Hort.  Ripul.  App.  t.  8 ; Jambosa  australis,  DC.  Prod.  iii. 
287  ; J.  Thozetiana,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  225. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller,  C.  Stuart:  Wide  Bay,  Bidwill ; Rockhampton,  Dullacliy, 
Thozet ; Ipswich,  Nernst. 

Wood  of  a light-grey,  close-grained  ; suitable  for  tool-handles  on  account  of  its  toughness. 
The  fruit  used  for  jam  and  wine-making. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  I foods  No.  228. 

23.  E.  punctulata  (leaves  punctate),  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  xiii.  Tree  often  tall, 
branchlets  somewhat  compressed  approaching  4-angled.  Leaves  subcoriaceous, 
broadly  lanceolate,  the  apex  obtusely  acuminate,  tapering  towards  the  base  and 
almost  sessile,  attaining  a length  of  3Mn.  and  lfin.  width  in  the  centre,  the 
lateral  veins  almost  transverse,  the  upper  surface  in  the  dried  specimens  closely 
covered  by  sunk  dots.  Flowers  in  axillary  or  terminal  very  short  panicles  of 
sessile  flowers.  Calyx-tube  about  5 lines  long,  pear-shaped  and  often  somewhat 
angular,  produced  above  the  ovary,  lobes  4,  unequal,  the  larger  ones  about  2 lines 
broad.  Petals  about  twice  the  size  of  the  calyx-lobes,  separately  deciduous. 
Stamens  flexuose  and  not  much  longer  than  the  petals.  Style  about  as  long  as 
the  stamens.  Fruit  bright-red,  and  more  or  less  lobed  near  the  top,  juicy,  about 
fin.  diameter.  Seeds  few. 

Hab.:  Eumundi,  R.  D.  Power  (in  fruit),  J.  FI.  Simmonds  (in  flower,  June).  I have  also  a 
specimen  gathered  by  the  late  Rev.  B.  Scortechini,  without  note  of  locality. 

24.  E.  sordida  (appearance  shabby),  Bail.  Bot.  Bull.  v.  A small  tree  with 
rather  scanty  foliage.  Leaves  under  3in.  long,  and  from  f to  fin.  broad,  sub- 
coriaceous,  narrow-lanceolate,  obtuse.  Petiole  about  2 lines  long,  the  midrib 
alone  prominent,  the  primary  veins  looping  near  the  margin.  Flowers  few,  in 
short  head-like  racemes  terminating  lateral  shoots  ; peduncle  about  2 or  3 lines  long  ; 
bracts  oblong,  minute ; flowers  sessile,  or  the  calyx-tube,  which  is  very  open  at 
the  top,  tapering  into  a very  minute  pedicel,  about  2 lines  long,  glabrous  ; lobes 
somewhat  orbicular,  only  slightly  persistent.  Petals  slightly  exceeding  the  calyx- 
lobes.  Stamens  under  3 lines  long.  No  fruit  seen. 

Hab.:  Near  the  summit  of  the  South  Peak  of  Bellenden  Ker,  Expedition,  1889. 

25.  E.  macoorai  (native  name  of  South  Peak  of  Bellenden  Ker),  Bail.  Bot. 
Bull.  v.  A small  slender  tree,  the  branches  somewhat  drooping.  Leaves  on 
short  petioles,  narrow'-lanceolate,  the  apex  elongated  hut  not  acute,  3 to  Sin.  long, 


Part  II.  Z 


LT.  MYRTACEiE. 


[Eugenia. 


G64 

i to  lin.  broad  in  the  middle,  panicle  terminal,  the  tops  of  the  branches  usually 
hearing  sessile  flowers.  Calyx-tube  '^tapering  much  towards  the  base,  somewhat 
hoary,  about  3 lines  long  ; lobes  about  1 line  long,  very  broad.  Petals  twice  as 
long  as  the  calyx-lobes  ; the  oil-dots  very  prominent  when  dry.  Stamens  twice 
the  length  of  petals.  No  fruit  obtained. 

Hub  : Near  the  summit  of  the  South  Peak  of  Bellenden  Ker,  Expedition,  1889. 

26.  E.  Luehmanni  (after  J.  G.  Luehmann),  F.  v.  M.  Viet.  Nat.  May  1892. 

A glabrous  tree  of  about  20ft.  Leaves  1^  to  2f  in.  long,  and  1J  to  lfin.  broad  ; 
almost  lanceolate,  but  gradually  much  protracted  into  a bluntish  point.  Panicles 
short,  brachiate,  their  main  divisions  somewhat  thyrsoid  ; pedicels  very  short. 
Flowers  very  small,  rather  crowded,  3 or  2,  sometimes  only  1,  on  the  short 
ultimate  peduncles.  Calyx-tube  hemi-ellipsoid,  without  any  conspicuous  angula- 
tion, densely  glandular-dotted  ; lobes  semiorbicular,  much  shorter  than  the  tube. 
Petals  whitish,  twice  the  length  of  the  calyx-lobes,  free.  The  stamens  and  style 
much  exceeding  the  petals.  Anthers  almost  ovate.  Stigma  minute  ; ovary 
deeply  sunk,  2-celled.  Ripe  fruit  not  seen. 

Hab.:  Mount  Bartle  Frere,  Stephen  Johnson  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 

27.  E.  angophoroides  (Angophora-like),  F.  v.  M.  Fragw.  v.  33;  Benth.  FI. 

Austr.  iii.  286.  “ Woorboon,”  Barron  River,  J.  F.  Bailey.  A glabrous  tree  of 

60ft.  with  a smooth  white  bark.  Leaves  petiolate,  oblong-lanceolate  or  elliptical, 
acuminate,  mostly  2 to  3in.  long,  narrowed  at  the  base,  finely  penniveined  as  in 
E.  Yentenatii , but  the  veins  more  prominent.  FlowTers  in  a compound  terminal 
corymbose  panicle,  shorter  than  the  leaves.  Buds  obovoid,  nearly  sessile  or 
tapering  into  a very  short  pedicel.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  scarcely  more  than 
1 line  long,  and  about  1A  line  diameter  ; lobes  or  teeth  either  5,  all  small  and 
triangular,  or  one  larger  and  more  petal-like.  Petals  broad,  about  1 line 
diameter,  separately  deciduous.  Stamens  about  2 lines  long,  anthers  ovate  or 
cordate-globose.  Ovules  several  in  each  cell  of  the  ovary.  Fruit  3 to  4 lines, 
depressed-globose,  or  nearly  bell-shaped,  the  top  truncate,  black  and  sweetish 
when  ripe. 

Hab.:  Bockingham  Bay,  Dallacliy. 

With  the  habit  and  aspect  of  E.  Ventenatii,  but  readily  distinguished  by  the  more  sessile 
flowers  as  well  as  by  the  calyx  and  petals. — Benth. 

28.  E.  oleosa  (oil-dots  numerous),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  15  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  287.  A small  handsome  tree  of  15  to  20ft.  (Dallacliy),  flowering  as  a large 
shrub,  but  forming  at  times  a tree  of  100ft.  (F.  v.  M.j,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves 
from  elliptical  to  lanceolate,  acuminate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  2 to  3 or  rarely  lin. 
long,  not  very  thick,  sometimes  l^in.  broad,  the  veins  oblique  and  prominent 
underneath.  Flowers  white,  remarkable  for  their  long  slender  stamens,  in 
trichotomous  pedunculate  cymes,  either  opposite  at  the  base  of  the  new  shoots  or 
terminal  in  pairs,  the  peduncles,  branches  and  pedicels  slender.  Calyx  narrow- 
turbinate,  nearly  3 lines  long,  tapering  into  a pedicel,  sometimes  short,  sometimes 
as  long  as  the  calyx  ; lobes  4,  ovate  or  broad,  about  \ line  long.  Petals  quite 
separate,  about  1^  line  diameter.  Filaments  very  numerous  and  fine,  iin.  long 
or  more.  Style  capillaxw,  fin.  long,  with  minute  stigma.  Ovary  not  half  so 
long  as  the  calyx-tube,  with  about  8 ovules  in  each  cell ; style  long  and  slender. 
Fruit  globular,  oblong,  fin.  long,  blue,  1 -seeded. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallacliy  ; Bellenden  Ker. 

Very  near  E.  rivularis,  Seem.,  from  the  Fiji  Islands,  but  the  veins  of  the  leaves  are  not  nearly 
so  numerous  or  close,  and  more  oblique,  and  the  stamens  nearly  twice  as  long  as  in  that 
species. — Benth. 

29.  E,  apodophylla  (leaves  sessile),  F.  v.  M.  Viet.  Nat.  April  1892.  A 
tree  of  about  40ft.  high  ; branchlets  prominently  quadrangular,  some  parts  quite 
membranously  margined.  Leaves  1 to  24in.  long,  firmly  chartaceous,  long- 


Eugenia.] 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


665 


acuminate,  with  rounded  base,  sessile,  pinnately  thin-veined,  oil-dots  much  con- 
cealed. Flowers  small,  from  2 to  4 together  between  terminal  leaves ; peduncles 
none  ; united  pedicels  and  flower-buds  club-shaped  ; calyx  passing  gradually  into 
the  twice-longer  pedicel,  punctular-scabrous.  Petals  1^  line,  at  first  coalescent 
into  a hemispheric  lid,  but  some  finally  expanding.  Stamens  much  longer  than 
the  petals,  some  4 lines  long ; anthers  roundish  when  open  ; style  elongated  ; 
ovary  sunk  deeply.  Fruit  reddish. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Bellenden  Ker  Range,  W.  Sayer. 

30.  E.  hedraiophylla  (leaves  sessile),  F.  v.  M.  Viet.  Xat.  April  1892. 
Stature  not  recorded.  Branchlets  glabrous  and  prominently  quadrangular. 
Leaves  rather  large,  chartaceous,  elliptic-lanceolate,  gradually  acuminated,  with 
rounded  base,  almost  sessile,  veins  faint,  pinnace  and  immersed,  oil-dots  copious 
but  not  conspicuous.  Flowers  small  in  ample  bracliiate  panicles  ; peduncles 
from  decurrent  prominences,  very  quadrangular  ; flowers  frequently  ternate  on 
the  ultimate  peduncles ; pedicels  extremely  short  or  obliterated ; calyx  hemispheric- 
turbinate,  slightly  lobed  or  almost  truncate.  Petals  hardly  expanding.  Anthers 
very  minute,  about  as  long  as  broad.  Style  capillary,  thin  ; ovary  much  sunk. 
Fruit  quite  small,  almost  globular,  one-seeded,  terminated  by  a comparatively 
broad  limb  of  thin  structure,  and  separated  from  it  by  some  constriction  ; pericarp 
very  thin. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Mosnian  River,  Win.  Sayer ; Russell  River,  Stephen  Johnson. 

31.  E.  cryptophlebia  (teins  obscure),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  ix.  144.  A tree  of 
about  50ft.,  resembling  an  Elceodendron,  branchlets  nearly  terete.  Leaves  oblong- 
lanceolate,  thin  coriaceous  or  thickish  chartaceous,  opaque,  veins  immersed, 
lateral  ones  distant,  2 to  4in.  long,  8 to  16  lines  broad,  glaucous-green,  the  young 
growth  almost  scarlet.  Peduncles  bearing  cymes  or  racemes  about  as  long  as  the 
leaves.  Flowers  sessile,  usually  in  threes.  Calyx  clavate-ovate,  about  3 lines 
long.  Petals  4 ; anthers  roundly  ovate,  obtuse. 

Hab.:  About  Rockingham  Bay,  J.  Dallachy. 

32.  E.  Dallachiana  (after  J.  Dallachy),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Eenth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
287.  A tree  of  20ft.  Leaves  broadly  ovate,  3 to  Sin.  long,  of  a thinner  consistence 
than  in  most  Eugenias,  and  the  one  or  two  lower  pairs  of  veins  more  prominent  than 
the  others  and  continued  almost  to  the  apex  of  the  leaf,  so  as  to  make  it  appear 
almost  triplinerved  ,or  quintuplinerved  like  some  Ehodowgrti.  Cymes  axillary, 
pedunculate,  rather  loose,  and  apparently  only  few-flowered,  but  the  specimens 
seen  are  only  in  young  fruit.  Calyx-tube  in  that  state  nearly  globular,  about 
3 lines  diameter,  not  produced  above  the  ovary;  lobes  4,  broad,  spreading, 
unequal,  all  shorter  than  the  tube.  Petals  white,  slightly  silky.  Stamens 
scarcely  2 lines  long ; anthers  ovate-rotund.  Ovary  2-celled,  with  rather 
numerous  ovules  in  each  cell,  but  only  one  or  two  from  the  same  cell  enlarged. 
Fruit  only  known  in  a young  state. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy. 

The  aspect  of  this  plant  is  very  different  from  that  of  any  Eugenia  known  to  me,  yet,  as  far  as 
the  specimens  go,  they  supply  no  character  to  separate  it  from  the  genus. — Benth. 


30.  BARRINGTON1A,  Forst. 

(After  the  Hon.  D.  Barrington.) 

(Stravadium,  Juss.) 

Calyx-tube  ovoid  or  turbinate,  not  at  all  or  scarcely  produced  above  the  ovary, 
the  limb  either  closed  in  the  bud  and  splitting  into  2 to  4 valvate  segments  or 
rarely  with  3 or  4 lobes,  imbricate  in  the  bud.  Petals  4 or  5,  adhering  at  the 
base  to  the  staminal  cup.  Stamens  numerous,  in  several  series,  shortly  united 


LI.  MYRTACEiE. 


[Barrivfitnnia . 


660 

at  the  base  into  a ring  or  cup;  anthers  small,  with  parallel  cells  opening  longi- 
tudinally. Ovary  inferior,  with  an  annular  disk  on  the  top  within  the  stamens, 
2 to  4-celled,  with  2 to  8 ovules  in  each  cell,  horizontal  or  pendulous,  in  2 rows  ; 
style  filiform  with  a small  stigma.  Fruit  pyramidal  ovoid  or  oblong,  hard  and 
fibrous,  indehiscent.  Seed  usually  solitary,  with  a thick  testa;  embryo  undivided, 
consisting  of  a thick  woody  stratum,  and  a more  or  less  distinct  pith  in  the 
centre. — Trees.  Leaves  alternate,  usually  crowded  at  the  ends  of  the  branches, 
penniveined  and  not  dotted.  Flowers  in  terminal  or  lateral  spikes  or  racemes. 
Bracts  small  and  deciduous. 

The  genus  is  confined  to  the  tropical  regions  of  the  Old  World.  The  Australian  species  are 
widely  dispersed  over  the  Indian  Archipelago,  and  one  is  also  common  in  East  India. — Benth. 

Skct.  I.  Butonica.  — Calyx  valvate ; 2 to  3,  rarely  4 -lobed. 

Leaves  entire,  often  above  1ft.  long.  Flowers  large,  in  short  racemes. 

Stamens  2 to  4in.  long.  Fruit  large,  4-angled 1.7?.  speciosa. 

Leaves  crenulate-denticulate,  near  1ft.  long.  Petioles  short.  Racemes  long, 

pendulous.  Fruit  oblong 2.  7?.  racemosa. 

Skct.  II.  Stravadium. — Calyx  slightly  imbricate  ; 3 to  5,  usually  4-lobed. 

Leaves  serrulate  or  entire,  under  (jin.  long.  Flowers  small,  in  long  racemes. 

Stamens  3 to  4 lines  long.  Fruit  small 3.  7?.  acutangula. 

1.  B.  speciosa  (showy),  Linn.  /.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  288;  Benth.  FI.  Audr.  iii. 
2 IS.  A large  handsome  tree.  Leaves  sessile,  obovate,  entire,  attaining  more 
than  1ft.  in  length.  Flowers  very  large,  in  short  terminal  racemes,  the  rhachis 
thick,  the  pedicels  1 to  2in.  long.  Calyx  deeply  divided  into  2 or  3 oval-oblong 
concave  almost  leaf-like  segments,  above  lin.  long.  Petals  from  half  as  long 
again  to  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx  segments.  Stamens  very  numerous,  red,  2 to 
lin.  long.  Ovary  imperfectly  4-celled,  with  about  6 ovules  in  each  cell.  Fruit 
large,  pyramidal,  4-angled,  crowned  by  the  persistent  calyx-lobes. — Wight  Ic. 
t.  547  ; Ex.  Bull.  Kol.  Mus.  Haarlem  1896  pi.  xxvii. 

Hub.:  Cape  York  and  Dayman’s  Island,  Endeavour  Straits,  IF.  Hill;  Rockingham  Bay,  J. 
Dallacliy  (F.  v.  M.) 

Widely  dispersed  over  the  Indian  Archipelago  and  Pacific  Islands. 

Wood  of  a yellow  colour,  tough,  and  firm  ; might  be  used  in  cabinet-work.—  Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql 
Woods  No.  229. 


2.  B.  racemosa  (flowers  ill  long  racemes),  Gciuduh.  in  Fee  ye.  Voy.  Bot. 
483  t.  107  ( F.  v.  31.  Fmym.  ix.  118)  ; Bliune,  DC.  Proil.  iii.  288.  A medium- 
sized tree,  glabrous.  Leaves  about  1ft.  long  and  3in.  broad,  cuneate-oblong, 
slightly  crenate-denticulate  on  very  short  petioles.  Flowers  in  long  pendulous 
racemes  rather  distant,  pedicels  about  fin.  long.  Calyx  at  length  opening  into  2 
to  4 lobes.  Petals  and  stamens  white  or  rosy.  Style  about  lfin.  long.  Fruit 
irregularly  ovoid-oblong,  2fin.  long,  lfin.  broad,  exocarp  fibrous,  seed  ovoid, 
about  lfin.  long,  fin.  broad. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay  ; Mulgrave  River  ; Islands  of  Torres  Straits. 

Wood  of  a yellow  colour,  close-grained,  but  of  little  value,  being  too  readily  eaten  by  insects.— 
Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  229a. 


3.  B.  acutangula  (fruit  angular),  Gcertn.  Fract.  ii.  97,  t.  101;  Benth.  FI. 
Aitstr.  iii.  288.  A large  handsome  tree.  Leaves  from  obovate  or  oblong-cuneate 
to  almost  elliptical,  obtuse  or  shortly  acuminate,  rarely  much  above  4in.  long, 
serrulate  or  entire,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole.  Flowers  red,  rather  small,  in 
very  long  slender  pendulous  racemes.  Bracts  oblong,  very  deciduous.  Pedicels 
2 to  4 lines  long.  Calyx-tube  ovoid-globose,  about  1 line  long  ; lobes  4,  rather 
longer  than  the  tube,  orbicular.  Petals  about  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx-tube. 


667 


Barringtunid.]  Lt.  M YRTACE  /E. 

Stamens  not  much  longer  than  the  petals.  Ovary  2-celled,  with  2 pendulous 
ovules  in  each  cell.  Fruit  oblong,  4-angled,  lin.  long  or  rather  more. — Wight 
and  Am.  Prod.  333;  Stravadium  ruhrum,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  289. 

Hab.:  Around  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria. 

Common  in  most  parts  of  India  as  well  as  in  the  Archipelago.  I find  but  2 cells  to  the  ovary 
both  in  the  Indian  and  in  the  Australian  specimens.— Benth. 


31.  CAREYA,  Roxb. 

(After  Dr.  Carey,  the  divine,  and  Indian  linguist.) 

Calyx-tube  thick,  turbinate  or  ovoid,  not  produced  above  the  ovary,  the  limb 
deeply  4-lobed.  Petals  4,  spreading.  Stamens  numerous  in  several  series,  quite 
free,  the  outermost  longer  ones  or  the  innermost  shorter  ones  or  both  without 
anthers,  the  intermediate  ones  or  nearly  all  perfect ; anthers  small,  with  parallel 
cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  inferior,  4 or  rarely  5-celled,  with  several 
small  ovules  in  2 rows  in  each  cell  ; style  elongated,  with  a somewhat  capitate 
or  slightly  4-lobed  stigma.  Fruit  globular,  fleshy,  with  a hard  rind,  crowned  by 
the  calyx-limb.  Seeds  several,  enveloped  in  a fleshy  pulp,  and  usually  irregularly 
scattered ; testa  thick  ; embryo  undivided. — Trees,  or  in  one  instance  an  under- 
shrub. Leaves  alternate,  usually  crowded  at  the  ends  of  the  branches,  penni- 
veined  and  not  dotted.  Flowers  large,  in  racemes  or  interrupted  spikes,  usually 
short. 

The  genus  comprises  several  E.  Indian  species,  one  of  which  (C.  arborea , Roxb.)  is  very 
like  the  Australian  one. 

1.  C.  australis  (Australian)  F.  v.M.  Fragm.  v.  183.  “Go-onje,”  Cloncurry, 
Palmer;  “ Gunthamarrah,”  Mitchell  River,  Palmer:  “ Ootcho,”  Mitchell  River, 
Palmer:  “ Barror,”  Rockhampton,  Thozet ; “ Kuiperi,”  Batavia  River,  Roth; 
“Jo-ora,”  Palmer  River,  Roth.  A tree  attaining  a large  size.  Leaves  from  ovate 
and  shortly  acuminate  to  obovate  and  very  obtuse,  minutely  crenulate  or  entire. 
Flowers  large,  pedicellate,  few  together  in  very  short  cymes,  terminating 
short  leafy  shoots.  Calyx-lobes  4,  orbicular,  unequal,  the  larger  ones  minutely 
ciliolate.  Petals  when  fully  out  obovate-oblong,  in  some  specimens  2in.  long, 
in  others  much  smaller.  Perfect  stamens  as  long  as  the  petals,  without  any 
barren  filaments  outside,  but  a few  short  ones  inside  without  anthers.  Ovary 
4-celled,  with  10  to  12  ovules  in  each  cell.  Fruit  broadly  ovoid,  l|in.  long  or 
more,  not  at  all  angled,  crowned  by  the  persistent  calyx-lobes. — C.  arhorea, 
Roxb.  var.  (?)  australis,  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  289. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Brown,  He  line ; Cape  Grafton.  Bunks  and 
Solander ; estuary  of  the  Burdekin , Fitzalan  : Rockhampton,  Di  iliac  hi/. 

Fruit  eaten  when  ripe. — Palmer. 

Bark  made  into  twine. — Roth.  Bark  used  for  poisoning  fish. — Murrell,  Palmer,  and  Roth. 

Wood  of  a light-grey  colour,  red  in  the  eentre ; close  in  grain  and  tough  ; easily  worked. — - 
Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  Xo.  230. 


Order  LIT.  MELAST0MACE7E. 

Calyx-tube  enclosing  the  ovary,  and  either  cohering  with  its  angles,  leaving 
intermediate  cavities,  or  entirely  free  or  more  or  less  adnate  to  it,  the  limb  entire 
or  with  3 to  o or  rarely  6 lobes  or  teeth,  usually  imbricate  in  the  bud.  Petals  as 
many  as  calyx-lobes,  inserted  at  the  orifice  of  the  calyx-tube,  imbricate  (usually 
contorted)  in  the  bud.  Stamens  usually  twice  as  many,  sometimes  only  as  many 
as  petals  and  inserted  with  them,  the  filaments  curved  down  in  the  bud;  anthers 
2-celled,  opening  in  1 or  2 pores  at  the  top  or  very  rarely  in  longitudinal  slits, 
and  before  flowering  their  tips  are  usually  contained  in  the  cavities  between  the 


668 


Lll.  MELASTOMACE^. 


ovary  and  calyx,  the  connective  often  variously  extended  or  thickened.  Ovary 
enclosed  in  the  calyx-tube  and  adnate  to  it,  or  more  or  less  free,  with  2 to  6 or 
rarely  more  cells,  with  the  placenta  in  the  axis,  or  rarely  1 -celled  by  the  abortion 
of  the  partitions.  Style  simple,  with  a minute  or  capitate  or  peltate  stigma. 
Ovules  several,  rarely  2 only  to  each  placenta,  anatropous.  Fruit  enclosed  in  the 
calyx  or  combined  with  it,  either  succulent  and  indehiscent,  or  bursting  irregularly, 
or  capsular  and  opening  in  as  many  valves  as  there  are  cells.  Seeds  usually 
numerous  and  small,  straight  or  cochleate  (i.e.  curved  somewhat  like  an  univalve 
shell),  without  albumen  ; testa  coriaceous,  crustaceous  or  membranous.  Embryo 
straight  or  curved ; cotyledons  plano-convex  or  thick  and  variously  folded ; 
radicle  short. — Herbs,  shrubs  or  rarely  trees.  Leaves  opposite,  simple,  petiolate, 
8 to  11-nerved,  or  in  Memecylece  1-nerved  and  penniveined,  entire  or  rarely  serru- 
late. Stipules  none.  Flowers  usually  in  terminal  panicles  or  clusters,  rarely 
axillary  or  solitary. 

A large  Order,  chiefly  American,  and  most  abundant  within  the  tropics,  a considerable  number 
also  in  tropical  and  subtropical  Asia,  especially  in  the  Eastern  Archipelago,  and  a few  in  tropical 
and  southern  Africa.  The  5 Australian  genera  are  all  Asiatic  and  4 of  them  also  African.  — 
Benth. 

Thebe  I.  Osbeckieac. — Leuven  with  3,  5 or  more  ribs.  Anthers  opening  in  a single  terminal 
pore.  Ovary  more  or  less  adherent , except  the  convex  or  conical  summit.  2 to  6- celled . Fruit 


capsular  or  rarely  pulpy.  Seeds  cochleate. 

Anthers  all  similar  and  equal  or  nearly  so.  Fruit  capsular,  opening  in  valves. 

Calyx-lobes  4,  rarely  5,  with  bristle-like  appendages  between  them.  Anthers 

without  any  or  scarcely  any  appendage  at  the  base 1.  Osbeckia. 

Calyx-lobes  5 or  6,  without  appendages  between  them.  Anthers  with  a short 

2-lobed  inflected  appendage  at  the  base 2.  Otanthera. 

Anthers  alternately  smaller  or  dissimilar.  Fruit  succulent  or  pulpy,  bursting 

irregularly 3.  Melastoma. 


Tribe  II.  IVKedinille^e.  —Ovary  almost  or  wholly  adnate  to  the  calyx-tube.  Fruit  a berry , 
rarely  a capsule,  crowned  by  the  calyx-limb,  or  areolate ; crown  convex,  glabrous  or  bristly.  Seeds 


usually  obovoid  or  pyramidal,  never  cochleate. 

Anthers  8,  10,  12,  subequal ; connective  not  lengthened  below 4.  Medinilla 

Tribe  III.  IVIemecyleac. — Leaves  with  the  midrib  prominent,  the  veins  pinnate  or  incon- 
spicuous. Anther-cells  adnate  to  a much-tliickened  connective,  and  opening  in  separate  slits  or 
pores.  Ovary  adnate,  1-cellcd,  with  a central  placenta.  Fruit  a berry  . ...  5.  Memecylon. 


1.  OSBECKI A,  Linn. 

(After  P.  Osbeck.) 

Calyx-tube  ovoid,  globular  or  urceolate  ; lobes  or  teeth  4 or  5,  deciduous,  with 
appendages  between  them,  which  are  usually  bristle-like,  terminating  in  a tuft  of 
hairs.  Petals  obovate.  Stamens  twice  as  many  as  petals,  all  equal  and  similar 
or  nearly  so  ; anthers  opening  in  a single  pore  at  the  summit,  and  without  any 
or  scarcely  any  appendage  at  the  base  of  the  connective.  Ovary  4 or  5-celled, 
crowned  with  bristles.  Fruiting-calyx  usually  truncate  after  the  fall  of  the  lobes  ; 
capsule  opening  at  the  top  in  as  many  valves  as  there  were  cells  to  the  ovary. 
Seeds  cochleate.— Herbs,  undershrubs,  or  rarely  shrubs.  Leaves  sessile  or  petio- 
late, 3,  5,  or  7-nerved.  Flowers  usually  terminal,  in  clusters  or  short  racemes, 
often  forming  leafy  panicles,  rarely  solitary.  Calyx-tube  often  more  or  less  covered 
with  bristles  or  ciliate  scales. 

The  genus  comprises  a few  African  species,  besides  a considerable  number  from  tropical  Asia 
and  the  Archipelago,  including  the  Queensland  one. 

1.  O.  Chinensis  (of  China),  Linn.  Spec.  PI.  490  ( not  Bot.  Reg.  nor  Bot. 
Mag.) ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  291.  A herb  undershrub  or  shrub,  from  14  to  8ft. 
high,  glabrous  or  with  a few  short  stiff  hairs.  Leaves  very  shortly  petiolate, 
linear  linear-oblong  or  almost  lanceolate,  1 to  2in.  long.  Flowers  several 


O.sbeclcia.] 


LII.  MELASTOMACE.E. 


669 


together,  sometimes  very  few,  forming  sessile  terminal  clusters,  almost  condensed 
into  heads.  Calyx-tube  about  3 lines  long  or  rather  more  ; lobes  4,  not  quite  so 
long  as  the  tube,  broad  or  narrow,  acute,  ciliate,  but  without  any  terminal  tuft  of 
hairs,  with  4 accessory  ciliate  scales  inserted  between  and  a little  below  them  on 
the  outside,  and  occasionally  a few  ciliate  scales  on  the  tube  below  the  middle. 
Petals  4.  Anthers  produced  into  a slender  beak.  Capsule  4-celled. — Benth.  FI. 
Hongk.  115,  with  the  synonyms  adduced;  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  160  ; O.  angusti- 
folia,  Don  ; Wall.  PI.  As.  Ear.  iii.  t.  251. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy,  and  other  localities  in  the  tropics. 

The  species  extends  over  the  Indian  Archipelago  and  the  eastern  provinces  of  India  to  S.  China 
and  Formosa. — Benth. 


2.  OTANTHERA,  Blume. 

(Anthers  with  ear-like  processes.) 

(Lachnopodium,  Blume.) 

Calyx-tube  ovoid  ; lobes  5 or  6,  deciduous,  alternating  with  as  many  short 
bristly  scales  or  appendages.  Petals  obovate.  Stamens  twice  as  many  as  petals, 
all  equal  and  similar  ; anthers  opening  in  a single  pore  on  the  summit,  the  con- 
nective produced  at  the  base  into  a short  2-lobed  appendage  turned  up  on  the 
inner  face.  Ovary  5 or  6-celled,  crowned  with  bristles.  Fruiting-calyx  truncate 
after  the  fall  of  the  lobes  ; capsule  (in  the  Australian  species)  opening  at  the  top 
in  as  many  valves  as  there  were  cells  to  the  ovary,  in  other  species  more  pulpy 
and  less  regularly  dehiscent.  Seeds  cochleate,  small  and  very  numerous. — 
Shrubs  more  or  less  strigose,  with  the  habit  of  the  smaller-flowered  Melastomas. 
Leaves  5 or  7-nerved.  Flowers  in  terminal  trichotomous  cymes  or  panicles. 

The  genus  consists  of  very  few  species,  natives  of  the  Indian  Archipelago,  one  of  which,  the 
same  as  the  Australian  one,  differs  slightly  from  the  others  in  the  fruit  drier  and  more  cap- 
sular, and  was  therefore  distinguished  by  Blume  under  the  name  of  Lachnopodium. — Benth. 

1.  O.  bracteata  (bracteate),  Kortli.  Verk.  Xat.  (resell.  Bot.  285  t.  51  ; Benth. 
FI.  Anstr.  iii.  292.  A shrub  of  several  feet,  the  branches  more  or  less  covered 
with  pale-coloured  or  rusty  hairs  or  bristles.  Leaves  petiolate,  ovate  or  ovate- 
elliptical,  mostly  3 to  5in.  long,  membranous,  rough  with  short  strigose  hairs. 
Flowers  few,  in  short  terminal  trichotomous  cymes,  the  peduncles  and  pedicels 
with  a few  small  leaves  at  the  base  of  the  cyme,  and  a short,  broad,  concave, 
almost  cordate  bract  at  the  base  of  each  branch  or  pedicel.  Calyx-tube  about  2 
lines  long,  densely  covered  with  small  scales,  divided  each  into  3 to  5 long  erect 
cilia  or  bristles ; lobes  5 or  6,  linear,  scarcely  so  long  as  the  tube,  ciliate  with  a 
few  long  bristles,  the  intermediate  bristly  scales  short  and  obtuse.  Petals  white 
or  pink,  5 to  6 lines  long,  each  with  a bristle  at  the  end.  Ovary  adnate  to  about 
half  the  calyx-tube,  the  convex  summit  very  bristly.  Fruit  nearly  globular, 
crowned  by  the  scars  of  the  calyx-lobes.  Capsule  apparently  dry,  the  placentas 
projecting  far  into  the  cells. — Naud.  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3 xiii.  354  ; Lachno- 
podium bracteatum,  Blume,  Mus.  Bot.  i.  56. 

Hab.:  Dalrymple  Creek,  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy,  and  other  tropical  localities. 

Also  in  Sumatra. 

Korthals  figures  the  calyx-lobes  rather  broad  ; I find  them  narrow,  as  described  by  Blume, 
both  in  the  Sumatran  and  the  Australian  specimens.  Lachnopodium  rubro-limbatum,  Blume, 
Mus.  Bot.  i.  56,  taken  up  from  tbe  Melastoma  rubro-limbatum,  a garden  plant,  figured  in  Link 
and  Otto,  Ic.  PI.  Sel.  89,  t.  41,  appears  to  be  the  same  species. — Benth. 

3.  MELASTOMA,  Linn. 

(Berries  stain  the  mouth  black.) 

Calyx-tube  campanulate  or  ovoid ; lobes  or  teeth  5 or  rarely  6,  deciduous,  with 
or  without  small  alternate  accessory  lobes  or  appendages.  Petals  obcordate  or 
obovate.  Stamens  twice  as  many  as  petals  ; anthers  elongated,  opening  at  the 


(570 


till.  ME)LAST0MACEJL 


[Melastomd. 


top  in  a single  pore,  very  unequal,  5 larger,  with  the  connective  produced  below 
into  a long  appendage  incurved  and  2-lobed  or  2-pointed  at  the  lower  end, 
o smaller,  with  the  appendage  shorter  or  wanting.  Ovary  5 or  rarely  6-celled, 
crowned  with  a few  stiff  hairs  or  bristles.  Fruit  truncate  after  the  fall  of  the 
calyx-lobes,  the  capsule  or  berry  more  or  less  succulent  or  pulpy  and  bursting 
irregularly.  Seeds  cochleate. — Shrubs,  more  or  less  strigose  or  hairy.  Leaves 
usually  ovate,  3 or  more-nerved.  Flowers  terminal,  solitary  or  few  together  in 
cymes,  often  large  and  showy  ; the  calyx  usually  covered  with  bristles  or  scales. 

A considerable  genus,  extending  over  tropical  Asia  and  the  Pacific  Islands.  The  only 
Australian  species  is  a common  one  in  India  and  the  Archipelago. 

1.  IVI.  malabathricum  (Malabar  plant),  Linn.  Spue.  PI.  559,  var.  poly- 
anthum : Benth.  FI.  Auntr.  iii.  292.  A shrub  of  a few  feet  in  height,  more  or  less 
clothed  with  hairs  or  bristles,  often  very  rigid  and  scale-like  on  the  branches, 
rigid  and  strigose  on  the  upper  side  of  the  leaves,  longer  and  softer  on  the  under 
side,  but  sometimes  nearly  all  rigid  and  scale-like,  or  nearly  all  long  and  soft. 
Leaves  petiolate,  from  ovate  almost  cordate  and  Gin.  long,  to  oblong-lanceolate 
and  Sin.  long,  with  :i  or  5 nerves  besides  a fine  intramarginal  one.  Flowers 
usually  about  5 to  11  in  terminal  almost  sessile  cymes.  Bracts  very  deciduous, 
from  large  and  broadly  ovate  to  small  and  narrow-lanceolate.  Calyx-tube  ovoid- 
globular,  2 to  3 lines  long,  densely  covered  with  appressed  chaffy  scales  or 
bristles;  lobes  usually  5,  from  ovate  to  lanceolate,  more  or  less  acuminate,  longer 
and  sometimes  much  longer  than  the  tube  or  rarely  rather  shorter,  alternating 
with  5 small  subulate  or  short  chaffy  scales  or  accessory  lobes.  Petals  large,  pale- 
purple  or  white.  Fruit  nearly  globular,  3 to  nearly  4 lines  diameter.  Seeds 
imbedded  in  a purple  pulp. — .1/.  poli/anthiiii i,  Blume.  Mus.  Bot.  i.  52  t.  6 ; M. 
<lenticidatum,  Labili.  Sert.  Austr.  Caled.  i.  65  t.  64  ; M.  Force- Hollandiai,  Naud.  in 
Ann.  Sc  Nat.  ser.  3 xiii.  290. 

Hab. : Endeavour  River,  Brinks  mid  Solander , .1.  Cunningham  : Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay, 
.1.  Cunningham  and  others  ; Mount  Elliott,  Dallachy  : common  in  swamps. 

The  typical  47.  mulnbatliricum  is  usually  distinguished  by  its  larger  flowers,  with  the  bracts 
and  calyx-lobes  larger  in  proportion,  but  some  of  the  Moreton  Island  specimens  have  them  nearly 
as  large  as  the  Indian  ones.  Many  Australian  specimens  correspond  exactly  either  with 
those  of  4/.  polijanthum  from  the  Archipelago,  or  with  those  of  47.  denticulatum,  from  New 
Caledouia,  and  it  is  probable  that  the  species  should  include  the  whole  of  the  24  adopted  or 
proposed  by  Naudin,  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  4 xiii.  284  to  293,  as  “ Species  magis  ad  47.  malabathricum 
vergentes  ideoque  diftieilius  distinguendas,”  besides  several  of  the  l;  Species  addendse,”  p.  294, 
not  seen  by  him.  The  characters  are  generally  most  trifling. — Bentli. 

4.  MEDINILLA,  Gaud. 

(After  Lon  Jose  de  Medinilla  y Pineda,  Governor  of  Marianne  Islands.) 

Calyx-tube  ovoid,  campanulate,  or  cylindrical,  limb  truncate  or  obscurely 
toothed.  Petals  4 or  5,  usually  acute,  often  fleshy.  Stamens  twice  as  many  as 
petals,  equal  or  nearly  equal,  rarely  unequal ; anthers  opening  at  the  top  by  one 
pore  ; connective  not  or  very  shortly  produced  at  the  base,  but  having  two  tuber- 
cles in  front  and  a spur  behind.  Ovary  inferior,  4 to  6-celled,  usually  glabrous  at 
the  apex ; style  filiform  ; ovules  very  many,  placentas  axile.  Berry  areolate  at 
the  top  or  crowned  by  the  limb  of  the  calyx.  Seeds  minute,  very  many,  ovoid  or 
sub-falcate,  raphe  often  thickened  and  excurrent. — Branching  shrubs,  erect  or 
scandent.  Leaves  opposite  or  wliorled,  entire,  often  fleshy,  with  3 to  9 longi- 
tudinal nerves.  Flowers  in  terminal  panicles  or  lateral  cymes,  white  or  rose, 
with  or  without  bracts,  4 or  5 rarely  6-merous. 

The  species,  which  are  about  50,  are  met  with  in  Malaya,  East  India,  Ceylon,  Fiji,  and  tropical 
Africa. 

1.  IVI.  Balls-Headleyi  (after  Dr.  Walter  Balls-Headley,  M.A.),  F.  r.  M. 
Auntr.  Journ.  of  Plutrw.,  April  1887.  Climbing,  glabrous  ; leaves  quaternary  in 
whorls,  ovate  or  elliptic-lanceolate,  longitudinally  3-uerved  from  near  the  base  ; 


Mriliii  ilia.) 


Lii.  meLastoMace^e. 


671 


secondary  nerves  very  spreading,  distant ; veins  obliterated ; calyx  urceolar- 
campanulate,  entire  at  the  margin  ; crown  of  ovary  depressed,  surrounded  by  an 
annular  indexed  membrane  ; fruit  6-celled ; placental  lamina  reaching  far  into 
the  cavity,  very  densely  beset  with  oblique,  ellipsoid-clavate,  smooth,  shining 
seeds. — F.  v.  M.  l.e. 

Hab.:  Bellenden  Ker  along  Alice  Creek,  11'.  Sayer. 

This  species,  the  first  detected  in  Australia,  is  not  unlike  31.  pterocaula,  but  the  branchlets  are 
not  prominently  angular,  the  leaves  are  not  much  decurrent  on  the  petiole,  their  intramarginal 
nerve  is  very  faint  or  obliterated,  and  the  fruiting-calyx  is  constricted  below  the  orifice  ; the  flora 
characteristics  require  to  be  studied,  only  leafy  branchlets  and  loose  over-ripe  fruits  being 
available  yet.  The  fruits  are  upwards  much  less  attenuated  than  those  of  31.  rosea.  On  these 
aged  fruits  it  is  difficult  to  trace  the  tender  bilaminulated  placental  plates ; but  their  attachment 
seems  axillary,  not  as  in  Astroniu,  basal.  The  external  resemblance,  however,  of  the  above  plant 
to  species  of  the  lastmentioned  genus  is  remarkable,  though  it  reminds  us  also,  when  in  a fruiting 
state,  of  several  species  of  Ayapetes,  Ilhodamnia,  and  Rhodomyrtus. — F.  v.  31.  l.c. 


5.  MEMECYLON,  Linn. 

(A  name  of  Dioscorides  for  a Strawberry-like  fruit.) 

Calyx-tube  hemispherical  or  campanulate,  the  limb  entire  or  obtusely  4-lobed, 
rarely  5-lobed.  Petals  4 or  rarely  5,  ovate  or  orbicular.  Stamens  twice  as 
many  as  petals,  all  equal  and  similar  ; anthers  short,  with  a thick  connective, 
forming  a conical  spur  at  the  base,  the  cells  opening  in  longitudinal  slits.  Ovary 
entirely  adnate  to  the  calyx-tube,  1-celled,  with  6 to  12  ovules,  verticillate  round 
a short  central  placenta  ; style  filiform,  with  a small  stigma.  Fruit  a berry, 
crowned  by  the  calyx-teeth  or  border,  or  by  a circular  scar  only.  Seeds  solitary 
or  rarely  2 or  8 ; testa  somewhat  crustaceous  ; cotyledons  very  much  convolute 
or  variously  folded,  usually  enclosing  the  radicle. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves 
coriaceous,  with  1 prominent  midrib  and  pinnate  veins  often  scarcely  perceptible. 
Flowers  usually  small,  in  axillary  clusters  or  cymes. 

The  genus  is  spread  over  the  tropical  regions  of  the  Old  World,  the  species  especially  numerous 
in  Ceylon  and  the  Indian  Archipelago.  The  only  Australian  one  is  also  in  Ceylon  and  the 
Indian  Peninsula. — Renth. 

1.  M.  umbellatum  (umbellate),  Bunn.  FI.  lnd.  87;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
298.  A bushy  or  divaricately-branched  shrub,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  shortly 
petiolate,  from  broadly  ovate  to  ovate-lanceolate,  obscurely  and  obtusely 
acuminate,  1 to  2in.  long,  of  a dark-green  and  shining  above,  paler  or  sometimes 
yellowish  underneath,  the  veins  usually  quite  inconspicuous.  Peduncles  axillary, 
very  short,  bearing  an  umbel-like  or  shortly  racemose  cluster  of  small  flowers, 
on  slender  pedicels  of  1 line  or  rather  more.  Adnate  part  of  the  calyx-tube  very 
short,  the  free  part  broadly  campanulate,  less  than  1 line  diameter,  broadly  and 
shortly  4-lobed.  Petals  ovate,  acute,  about  1 line  long.  Stamens  exceeding  the 
petals.  Fruit  green,  smooth,  nearly  globular,  about  8 or  rarely  4 lines  diameter, 
crowned  by  the  small  persistent  calyx-limb  ; pericarp  slightly  fleshy.  Seed  solitary, 
globular  ; cotyledons  fleshy  and  very  much  contortuplicate. — Thwaites,  Enurn. 
Ceyl.  PI.  Ill  ; M.  ramijiorum,  Lam.  Diet.  iv.  88,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  6 (at  least  as  to 
the  Indian  plant);  Wight,  Illustr.  i.  214,  t.  93  (M.  tinctorimn,  Ivoen.  on  the 
plate) ; Myrcia  t Australasia;,  F.  v.  M.  Eep.  Burd.  Exped.  7. 

Hab.:  Estuary  of  the  Burdekin,  Fitsalan ; Mount  Elliott,  Edgecombe  and  liockingham  Bays, 
Dallachy  ; Cleveland  Bay,  Bowman. 

The  species  is  common  in  Ceylon  and  the  Indian  Peninsula,  and  perhaps  also  in  the  Mauritius. 


Order  LIII.  LYTHRARIE®. 

Calyx-tube  free,  but  usually  enclosing  the  ovary  ; lobes  or  primary  teeth  4,  5, 
or  sometimes  more,  very  rarely  3,  valvate  in  the*  bud,  the  sinus  sometimes  pro- 
duced externally  into  as  many  accessory  teeth.  Petals  as  many  as  primary 


672 


LIII.  LYT1IRARIE/E. 


calyx-teeth  or  lobes,  rarely  deficient,  inserted  at  the  top  of  the  calyx-tube,  usually 
crumpled  in  the  bud.  Stamens  as  many  or  twice  as  many  as  petals  or  fewer,  or 
rarely  indefinite,  inserted  in  the  calyx-tube  at  various  heights  ; filaments  inflected 
in  the  bud  ; anthers  versatile,  with  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary 
free  from  the  calyx,  but  usually  enclosed  in  its  tube,  2 or  more-celled,  or  rarely 
1-celled  by  the  abortion  of  the  partitions;  style  simple,  the  stigma  capitate  or 
rarely  2-lobed.  Ovules  usually  numerous,  anatropous,  attached  to  the  axis,  or 
very  rarely  parietal.  Fruit  a membranous  coriaceous  or  hard  capsule,  variously 
dehiscent,  enclosed  in  or  surrounded  by  the  persistent  calyx,  the  valves  usually 
detaching  themselves  from  the  central  persistent  placentiferous  column.  Seeds 
without  albumen  ; testa  coriaceous,  membranous  or  rarely  thick  ; embryo 
straight ; cotyledons  oblong  or  orbicular-cordate  ; radicle  short,  or  rarely  cotyle- 
dons small  and  radicle  long. — Herbs,  shrubs  or  trees.  Leaves  opposite,  verticil- 
late  or  sometimes  alternate,  entire,  without  stipules.  Flowers  in  axillary  or 
terminal  panicles  cymes  or  clusters,  rarely  solitary. 

A considerable  Order,  some  of  the  herbaceous  genera  spread  over  the  greater  part  of  the  globe, 
the  larger  woody-stemmed  ones  confined  to  the  tropics  i'i  the  Old  or  the  New  World.  Five 
of  the  Queensland  genera  are  Asiatic,  3 of  them  being  also  African,  and  the  2 herbaceous  genera 
extend  to  America  and  Europe.  One  genus  extends  to  America  and  Africa.  The  naturalised 
weed  (which  is  also  European)  and  the  Pomegranate  are  strays  from  cultivation. 

Tribe  I.  Ammannies.  — Low  or  aquatic  herb*,  with  small  or  minute  flowers.  Calyx 


membranous. 

Annual  or  perennial  herbs,  very  rarely  becoming  woody  at  the  base. 

Calyx  short,  membranous,  the  ribs  inconspicuous  or  only  as  many  as 
primary  teeth ; accessory  teeth  minute  or  none.  Petals  very  small  or 

none 1.  Ammannia. 

Calyx  6-fid.  Stamens  often  6 ; filaments  short.  Style  very  short  ...  2.  'Peplis. 

Tribe  II.  Ly  threie. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Calyx  herbaceous  or  coriaceous.  Petals  often  larye, 
wrinkled. 

Calyx  narrow,  with  twice  as  many  ribs  as  primary  teeth  ; accessory  teeth 

prominent.  Petals  usually  conspicuous 3.  Lythrum. 

Flowers  cymose'  or  capitate.  Petals  corrugated  in  bud.  Capsule  valvular, 

4-celled 4.  Nes.ea. 

Shrubs  or  trees. 

Stamens  twice  as  many  as  petals.  Calyx-lobes  6,  with  accessory  teeth. 

Capsule  enclosed  in  the  calyx.  Maritime  shrub,  with  solitary  flowers 

in  the  upper  axils 5.  Pemphis. 

Flowers  6-fid.  Capsule  3 to  6-valved.  Seeds  winged 6.  Lagerstrieuia. 

Stamens  indefinite.  Calyx-lobes  4 to  8,  without  accessory  teeth.  Fruit 

large,  fleshy.  Flowers  large,  1 to  3 in  the  upper  axils 7.  Sonneratia. 

Au  anomalous  genus  with  inferior  ovary.  Calyx  with  5 to  7 thick  lobes. 

Petals  5 to  7.  Stamens  numerous.  Ovary  many-celled  ; cells  2-seriate, 
superposed . . 8.  *Ponica. 


1.  AMMANNIA,  Linn. 

(After  J.  Amman n.) 

(Rotala,  Linn.;  Ameletia,  DC.) 

Calyx  membranous,  short,  the  ribs  not  at  all,  or  the  primary  ones  only,  pro- 
minent, with  4 or  5,  rarely  3 or  6 primary  teeth,  without  any  or  with  very  small 
external  accessory  ones.  Petals  small  and  fugacious  or  none.  Stamens  as  many 
as  primary  calyx-teeth,  or  twice  as  many  or  fewer,  inserted  towards  the  middle  of 
the  tube  or  lower  down.  Ovary  2 to  5-celled,  or  1-celled  by  the  abortion  of  the 
partitions.  Style  often  short,  with  a capital  stigma.  Capsule  included  in  the 
persistent  calyx  or  protruding  from  it,  opening  in  septicidal  valves  or  bursting 
irregularly.  Seeds  very  small. — Annual  herbs,  chiefly  frequenting  wet  situations, 
usually  glabrous,  with  a 4-angled  stem.  Leaves  opposite  or  verticillate.  Flowers 
very  small,  subsessile  or  pedicellate,  solitary  or  in  trichotomous  cymes  or  clusters, 
with  a pair  of  small  bracteoles  under  the  calyx,  sometimes  very  minute  or  scarcely 
conspicuous. 


LlII.  LYTHRARIErE. 


673 


Ammannia.] 


A considerable  genus,  chiefly  tropical  and  Asiatic  or  African,  with  a few  species  from  tropical 
or  Northern  America,  or  from  more  temperate  Asia. — Benth. 

Subgenus  I.  Rotala. — Flowers  axillary,  solitary,  or  in  sessile  spikes.  Capsule  2 to  4-r alved. 

Leaves  narrow,  in  whorls  of  3 to  8.  Capsule  3 or  4-valved 1.  A.  Rotala. 

Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or  oblong,  opposite  or  rarely  in  threes.  Capsule  3 or 

4-valved 2 .A.  pentandra. 

Leaves  orbicular,  opposite.  Capsule  2-valved '6.  A.  diandra. 

Subgenus  II.  Eu- Ammannia. — Flowers  in  whorls,  cymes  or  clusters.  Capsule  circumsciss, 
or  bursting  irregularly. 

Flowers  1 to  3,  on  short  axillary  peduncles.  Leaves  broadly  oblong,  petiolate. 

No  petals 4.  A.  trijlora. 

Flowers  several  in  axillary  cymes. 

Leaves  narrowed  at  the  base.  Calyx-lobes  triangular.  No  petals  . . . . 5.  A.  indica. 

Leaves  dilated  or  cordate,  auriculate  at  the  base.  Calyx-teeth  very  short. 

Petals  present. 

Capsule  under  1 line  diameter.  Stamens  4 or  fewer . . . 6.  A.  multiflora. 

Capsule  about  line  diameter.  Stamens  above  4,  usually  6 to  8 . . . 7.  A.  auriculata. 


1.  A.  Rotala  (generic  name),  F.  r.  M.  Frag  in.  iii.  108  ; Benth . FI.  Austr. 
iii.  ‘295.  A slender  annual,  simple  or  slightly  branched,  often  creeping  at  the 
base,  and  not  above  Bin.  long  in  the  Australian  specimens,  twice  as  much  in 
some  Indian  ones.  Leaves  in  whorls  of  8 to  6 or  sometimes  more,  linear,  not 
exceeding  3 or  4 lines.  Flowers  minute,  nearly  sessile  and  solitary  in  the  axils. 
Calyx  smooth  and  membranous,  not  above  A line  diameter,  with  5 or  sometimes 
4 or  3 acute  teeth  without  accessory  ones.  Petals  none  or  minute  and  fugacious 
in  the  Australian  specimens,  nearly  as  long  as  the  calyx-teeth  in  some  Indian 
ones.  Stamens  3 (4  or  5 ?),  inserted  near  the  base  of  the  calyx  and  not  exceeding 
it.  Ovary  1-celled  or  more  or  less  divided  into  3 by  very  thin  evanescent  parti- 
tions. Style  short.  Capsule  8-valved. — Rotala  certicillaris,  Linn.  Mant.  195  ; 
DC.  Prod.  iii.  76  ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  260  ; Rotala  apetala,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  108. 

Hab.:  Bundaberg,  J.  Keys. 

Spread  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago. 

2.  A.  pentandra  (five-stamened),  Ro.rh.  FI.  hul.  i.  427 ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  296.  Annual  or  perhaps  a perennial  of  short  duration,  often  shortly  creeping 
at  the  base,  with  ascending  or  erect  stems,  6 to  8in.  high  and  scarcely  branched 
when  luxuriant,  but  often  only  2 or  3in.  and  much  branched.  Leaves  opposite 
or  very  rarely  the  floral  ones  in  threes,  from  ovate  cordate  to  oblong  and  almost 
cuneate,  acute  or  obtuse,  the  larger  ones  ^in.  long,  but  usually  not  above  |-in.,  the 
floral  ones  always  exceeding  the  flowers.  Flowers  solitary  in  the  axils,  sessile  or 
nearly  so.  Calyx  scarcely  above  ^ line  diameter,  with  5 or  rarely  4 or  3 short 
lobes,  without  accessory  teeth.  Petals  very  small  or  none.  Stamens  5,  or  some- 
times 4 or  3,  inserted  near  the  base  of  the  calyx  and  not  exceeding  its  lobes. 
Capsule  opening  in  3 or  rarely  4 valves.— DC.  Prod.  iii.  79  ; W.  and  Am.  Prod. 
305,  with  the  synonyms  adduced;  Blume,  Mus.  Bot.  ii.  t.  46;  Rotala  Ro.v- 
burghiana,  Wight,  Ic.  t.  260. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  ltiver,  R.  Brown;  waterholes,  Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart;  Lynd  River,  L. 
Leichhardt. 

Var.  decussata.  Smaller  and  more  branched.  Petals  usually  none.—  Rotala  decussata,  DC. 
Prod,  iii.  76  ; Ortegioides  decussata,  Soland.  in  Herb.  Banks  ; Entelia  amrnannioides,  R.  Br. 
Herb.;  Ammannia  illecebroides,  Arn.  in  Wight,  Cat.  n.  2317.  Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of 
Carpentaria  and  Shoalwater  Bay,  R.  Brown;  E.  coast,  Banks  and  Solander. 

3.  A.  diandra  (two-stamened),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  108  (under  Ameletia ); 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  296.  Erect  or  creeping  at  the  base,  branched  or  nearly 
simple,  not  exceeding  6in.  but  not  so  slender  as  the  preceding  species.  Stem 
leaves  sessile,  orbicular,  very  obtuse,  cordate  at  the  base,  2 to  3 lines  diameter, 
the  floral  ones  scarcely  smaller,  orbicular  or  ovate,  and  often  very  close,  forming 


674 


LIII.  LYTHRARIE^E. 


[Ammannia. 


imbricate  decussate  spikes.  Flowers  solitary  in  the  axils,  sessile  or  nearly  so. 
Calyx  small,  very  thin  and  membranous,  somewhat  4-angled,  with  4 acute  lobes 
shorter  than  the  tube,  without  accessory  teeth.  Petals  rudimentary.  Stamens 
usually  2,  inserted  below  the  middle  of  the  tube.  Ovary  1-celled  or  imperfectly 
2-celled.  Capsule  opening  in  2 valves. 

Hab.:  Around  tbe  lagoons  and  moist  banks  of  livers,  Gulf  country. 

The  specimens  are  all  in  fruit ; in  some  the  calyx  is  scarcely  1 line  long  and  shorter  than  the 
oblong  capsule  ; in  others  the  calyx  is  nearly  2 lines  long,  with  a very  much  shorter  globular 
capsule.  In  all  I have  found  either  small  rudimentary  petals  or  their  scars,  and  the  stamens 
adherent  to  about  one-third  of  the  calyx. — Benth. 

4.  A.  triflora  (three- dowered),  R.  Br.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  297.  A 
diffuse  much-branched  annual,  with  slender  ascending  stems  of  A to  1ft.,  minutely 
hoary-pubescent  or  glabrous.  Leaves  distinctly  petiolate,  oval-oblong,  narrowed 
or  rounded  at  the  base,  mostly  under  Ain.  long.  Peduncles  short,  with  1 to  8 
sessile  or  very  shortly  pedicellate  flowers,  much  larger  than  in  A.  indica.  Calyx- 
tube  broadly  campanulate,  with  4 broad  triangular  lobes,  and  the  sinuses 
produced  into  as  many  short  horizontally  spreading  accessory  lobes.  Petals 
none.  Stamens  4,  inserted  in  the  middle  of  the  calyx-tube.  Capsule  2-celled, 
depressed,  irregularly  circumsciss. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  E.  Brown. 

5.  A*  indica  (Indian),  Lam.  Illustr.  n.  1555  ? ; DC.  Prod.  iii.  77  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  297.  Erect,  more  or  less  branched,  and  often  exceeding  2ft.  in  height. 
Leaves  lanceolate  or  oblong-linear,  acute,  narrowed  at  the  base,  mostly  \ to  lin. 
long,  but  luxuriant  ones  sometimes  longer,  and  those  of  the  side  branches 
smaller.  Flowers  very  small,  in  little  axillary  cymes  or  clusters,  the  pedicels 
slender,  but  rarely  1 line  long,  and  the  common  peduncle  very  short  or  scarcely 
any.  Calyx  broadly  campanulate,  usually  about  f line  diameter,  with  4 short 
broad  triangular  lobes,  Avithout  accessory  teeth.  Petals  none.  Stamens  2 to  4 . 
Ovary  2-celled.  Capsule  depressed-globular,  usually  exceeding  the  calyx,  and 
bursting  irregularly. — W.  and  Am.  Prod.  805  ; Blume,  Mus.  Bot.  ii.  133  t.  46 ; 
A.  resicatoria,  Roxb.  FI.  Ind.  i.  426;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  78;  W.  and  Am.  Prod.  305. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River.  Hunts  and  Solunder  ; Shoalwater  Bay,  E.  Brown. 

Common  in  tropical  and  subtropical  Africa  and  Asia.  Lamarck  describes  the  leaves  as 
decurrent,  but  this  is  undoubtedly  the  species  to  which  his  plant  has  been  referred  by  De 
Candolle  and  others. — Benth. 

6.  A.  multiflora  (many-flowered),  Roxb.  FI.  Ind.  i.  426;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  298.  Erect  and  branched,  but  usually  smaller  than  A.  indica  or  A.  auriculata, 
and  often  only  3 to  4in.  high.  Leaves  linear  or  lanceolate,  often  above  Ain.  long, 
and  narrowed  below  the  middle,  but  always  more  or  less  dilated  and  cordate- 
auriculate  at  the  base,  as  in  A.  auriculata.  Flowers  minute,  in  little  axillary 
dichotomous  cymes  shorter  than  the  floral  leaves  ; the  peduncles,  branches  and 
pedicels  short  but  filiform.  Calyx  about  f line  long,  at  first  narrow  at  the  base 
with  the  upper  part  folded,  with  4 very  short  teeth,  afterwards  truncate,  with  the 
teeth  scarcely  conspicuous.  Petals  4,  minute.  Stamens  4,  or  fewer.  Ovary 
2-celled  ; style  rather  long.  Capsule  depressed-globular,  under  1 line  diameter, 
scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx,  bursting  irregularly  and  transversely.— DC.  Prod, 
iii.  79  ; W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  305  ; A.  australasica,  F.  v.  M.  Trans.  Phil.  Soct. 
Viet.  i.  41. 

Hab.:  Keppel  Bay,  E.  Brown. 

7.  A.  auriculata  (eared),  Willd.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  80  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
297.  Erect  and  not  much  branched,  usually  6in.  to  1ft.  high,  and  coarser  than 
the  other  Australian  species,  with  larger  flowers.  Leaves  lanceolate  or  oblong- 
linear,  mostly  A to  lin.  long,  sessile  and  dilated  at  the  base,  and  more  or  less 


Ammannia .] 


LIII.  LYTHRARIEiE. 


675 


cordate-auriculate.  Flowers  in  little  axillary  cymes,  shorter  than  the  floral 
leaves  ; the  peduncles,  branches,  and  pedicels  all  short.  Calyx  at  first  narrow  at 
the  base,  with  the  upper  part  broader  and  folded,  with  4 short  teeth,  above  1 line 
diameter  when  fully  out,  with  the  border  truncate,  the  teeth  scarcely  prominent. 
Petals  4,  orbicular.  Stamens  usually,  but  perhaps  not  always,  6 to  8.  Ovary 
2-celled  ; style  rather  longer  than  in  the  preceding  species.  Capsule  depressed- 
globular,  scarcely  exceeding  the  calyx,  about  Inline  diameter,  bursting  irregularly 
and  transversely. 

Hab.:  Point  Lookout.  Banks  and  Solander  ; Wide  Bay,  Bidwill. 

Abundant  in  tropical  and  subtropical  Africa,  perhaps  rather  less  so  in  Asia,  where  it  is 
commonly  replaced  by  the  preceding  species  or  variety. — Benth. 

2.  *PEPLIS,  Linn. 

(A  Greek  name  for  Purslane.) 

Calyx  campanulate,  with  6 rarely  5 external  and  6 internal  smaller  teeth. 
Petals  6 rarely  5,  inserted  at  the  throat  of  the  calyx,  very  fugacious  or  none. 
Stamens  6 rarely  5,  inserted  in  the  middle  of  the  calyx-tube  ; filaments  short, 
anthers  didymous.  Ovary  subglobose,  membranous,  2-celled,  included  in  the 
calyx.  Style  very  short.  Capsule  2-celled,  2-valved,  or  bursting  irregularly. 
Seeds  numerous,  minute,  obovate,  plano-convex. — Herbs  with  alternate  or  oppo- 
site, obovate  or  linear-oblong,  entire  leaves,  and  axillary,  sessile,  solitary,  small, 
2-bracteolate  flowers. 

This  genus  is  found  in  Europe,  temperate  Asia,  and  North  America. 

1.  P.  portula  (like  a Portulaca),  Linn.  Water  Purslane.  A slightly  branched 
creeping  plant,  with  obovate  or  oblong  leaves.  Flowers  sessile  in  the  axils  of 
nearly  all  the  leaves.  Capsule  enclosed  in  the  somewhat  enlarged  calyx,  but 
seldom  attaining  1 line  in  diameter. 

Hab.:  A common  European  plant  found  in  wet  situations;  has  become  naturalised  in  many 
Queensland  bush-houses. 


3.  LYTHRUM,  Linn. 

(From  lythron,  blood  ; colour  of  flowers.) 

Calyx  tubular,  8 to  12-ribbed,  with  4 to  6 triangular  often  very  short  primary 
lobes  or  teeth,  the  sinus  produced  into  as  many  external  accessory  ones,  short  or 
spreading,  or  erect  and  longer  than  the  primary  ones.  Petals  4 to  6.  Stamens 
twice  as  many  as  petals  or  fewer,  inserted  below  the  middle  of  the  calyx.  Ovary 
2-celled  (or  very  rarely  3-eelled?),  with  several  ovules  in  each  cell  ; style  filiform, 
with  a minute  or  capitate  stigma.  Capsule  included  in  the  persistent  calyx, 
oblong  or  globular,  opening  in  septicidal  valves  at  the  top  or  bursting  irregularly. 
Seeds  numerous,  small. — Herbs  or  rarely  undershrubs,  glabrous  or  villous. 
Leaves  opposite,  verticillate  or  the  upper  ones  alternate,  usually  narrow.  Flowers 
solitary,  or  3 to  5 together  in  the  axils,  sessile  or  pedunculate,  but  not  forming  a 
head  as  in  most  Nesceas. 

The  genus  is  spread  over  most  parts  of  the  globe. 

Calyx  outer-lobes  erect,  longer  than  the  inner  ones.  Capsule  oblong, 
hard,  septicidally  dehiscent. 

Tall  perennial.  Leaves  opposite  or  verticillate.  Flowers  nearly  sessile, 

several  in  each  axil,  forming  showy  terminal  spikes  more  or  less  leafy  i.  L.  Saticuria. 
Decumbent  annual.  Upper  leaves  alternate.  Flowers  small,  solitary, 
sessile  or  shortly  pedicellate 2.  L.  hyxsopifolium. 

1.  I ..  Salicaria  (Willow-like),  Linn.:  DC.  Prod.  iii.  82;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
298.  Loose  Strife.  Rootstock  perennial,  with  stout  annual  erect  stems,  2 to  8ft. 
high,  slightly  branched,  glabrous  or  pubescent.  Leaves  opposite  or  sometimes  in 


676 


LIII.  LYTHRARIE^E. 


[. Lythrum . 


threes,  sessile  and  stem-clasping,  lanceolate,  entire,  2 to  3in.  long.  Flowers 
reddish-purple  or  pink,  8 to  5 together,  nearly  sessile  in  the  axils,  forming  hand- 
some terminal  spikes,  more  or  less  leafy  at  the  base,  the  upper  floral  leaves 
reduced  to  bracts  scarcely  longer  or  even  shorter  than  the  flowers.  Calyx  about 
8 lines  long,  with  6 (rarely  5)  short  triangular  primary  lobes  or  teeth,  the  sinuses 
produced  into  as  many  subulate  erect  outer  lobes  much  longer  than  the  primary 
ones.  Stamens  usually  12,  6 longer  than  the  calyx  and  6 shorter.  Capsule 
oblong,  rather  hard,  enclosed  in  the  calyx,  splitting  septicidally  into  2 carpels 
opening  in  their  inner  face. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  126. 

Hab.:  Along  watercourses,  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  Fitzalan,  Leichhardt ; Darling 
Downs ; and  many  other  localities. 

The  species  is  common  in  northern  and  subtropical  Asia,  in  Europe,  and  N.  America.  For 
curious  details  on  the  fertilisation  of  three  different  sexual  forms,  see  Darwin  in  Journ.  Linn. 
Soc.  viii.  169. — Benth. 

2.  L.  hyssopifolium  (Hyssop-leaved),  Linn.-,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  81  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  299.  A glabrous  annual,  rarely  more  than  6 or  8in.  high,  the  stems 
slightly  branched  and  decumbent  at  the  base,  or,  in  starved  specimens,  erect  and 
simple.  Leaves  sessile,  narrow,  entire,  scarcely  Ain.  long,  the  lower  ones 
opposite,  the  upper  ones  alternate.  Flowers  small,  solitary  in  the  upper  axils, 
sessile  or  nearly  so.  Calyx  1 to  2 lines  long,  very  slender,  the  inner  primary 
lobes  or  teeth  very  minute  and  membranous,  the  outer  ones  longer,  erect, 
lanceolate-triangular  and  green.  Petals  4 to  6,  from  rather  shorter  than  the 
calyx-tube  to  rather  longer.  Stamens  about  as  many  as  petals.  Capsule  included 
in  the  calyx,  rather  hard,  opening  septicidally  at  the  top. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i. 
126;  L.  thymifolium,  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  81. 

Hab.:  Nut  uncommon  north  and  south. 

The  species  is  found  in  most  parts  of  the  world,  especially  in  maritime  districts. 


4.  NES./EA,  Commers. 

(A  sea-nymph.) 

Calyx  campanulate  or  urceolate,  persistent,  with  4 to  8 lobes  and  as  many 
cornua  or  at  least  callous  points  not  acrescent.  Petals  obovate,  as  many  as 
calyx-lobes  and  corrugated  in  bud,  longer  than  the  calyx  except  in  some  of  the 
capitate  species,  coloured,  usually  caducous.  Stamens  usually  twice  as  many  as 
the  calyx-lobes,  occasionally  the  same  number,  or  even  three  times  the  number, 
usually  all  or  at  least  half  of  them  exserted ; filaments  filiform.  Ovary  sessile, 
ovoid ; included  in  the  calyx-tube,  2 to  5-celled,  many-ovuled ; style  exserted  ; 
stigma  capitate.  Capsule  dehiscing  by  valves  or  by  slits  at  the  apex,  included  in 
the  calyx,  membranous  ; placenta  thick,  usually  lobed  ; seeds  numerous. — Herbs 
or  scarcely  undershrubs,  growing  in  wet  places,  especially  by  river  sides.  Leaves 
opposite,  or  occasionally  alternate  and  sometimes  verticillate.  Flowers  axillary, 
in  stalked  cymes  or  capitate,  sometimes  dimorphous.  Bracteoles  on  the  pedicels, 
not  at  the  base  of  the  calyx. 

Besides  Queensland,  the  species  are  found  in  America  and  Africa. 

1.  N.  Robertsii  (after  J.  F.  Roberts),  F.  v.  M.  Fracpn.  vii.  145  ; Austr. 
Syst.  Cens.  of  PI.  A scabrous  shrub,  the  branches  at  first  quadrangular,  soon 
nearly  terete,  cano-fulvescent.  Leaves  all  opposite,  lanceolate  or  oblong-oval, 
light-green,  A to  lin.  long,  2 to  4 lines  broad,  sessile,  slightly  decurrent,  entire  ; 
apex  somewhat  acute,  uninerved.  Peduncles  axillary,  1-flowered,  3 to  7 lines 
long,  rigid,  filiform.  Bracteoles  at  base  of  calyx  2,  appressed-ovate  or  renato- 
rhomboid.  Calyx  campanulate,  almost  nerveless  ; tube  2 or  3 lines  long ; teeth 
about  1 line  long,  and  callously  thickened  between  them  into  minute  accessory 
teeth.  Petals  6,  ovate-orbicular,  very  thin,  purple,  1^  to  2 lines  diameter, 


Xesrca .] 


LIII.  LYTHRARIE^. 


677 


fugacious.  Stamens  12  ; filaments  2 or  8 lines  long,  subulate-filiform  ; anthers 
dorsifixed,  ovate-cordate,  about  f line  long.  Style  glabrous,  filiform,  about  2 
lines  long ; stigma  scarcely  thicker  than  the  style.  Ovary  free,  ovate,  very  shortly 
stipitate,  4-celled  ; placenta  axillary. 

Hab.:  Bowen  Downs,  C.  Weld  Birch  (F.  v.  M.  l.e.) 

5.  PEMPHIS,  Forst. 

(From  pemphis,  a swelling.) 

(Maclellandia,  Wight.) 

Calyx  campanulate,  slightly  striate,  with  6 short  erect  triangular  primary  lobes 
or  teeth,  the  sinuses  produced  into  as  many  small  accessory  spreading  ones. 
Petals  6,  oval.  Stamens  12,  shorter  than  the  calyx,  and  attached  rather  above 
the  middle  of  the  tube.  Ovary  small,  8-celled  at  the  base  only,  with  several 
ovules  in  each  cell  ; style  rather  thick,  with  a broad  capitate  stigma.  Capsule 
globular,  enclosed  in  the  calyx,  transversely  circumciss.  Seeds  angular  or 
compressed,  the  testa  thick  with  the  angles  often  expanded  into  narrow  thick 
wings.— Shrub.  Leaves  opposite.  Flowers  solitary  in  the  axils. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species. 

1.  P.  acidula  (fruit  acid),  Forst;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  89;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
300.  A small  and  bushy  or  tall  and  spreading  shrub  or  small  tree,  more  or  less 
hoary  with  a minute  tomentum.  Leaves  oblong,  obtuse,  narrowed  into  a short 
petiole,  rather  thick,  1-nerved,  about  |in.  long.  Flowers  in  the  upper  axils,  on 
pedicels  shorter  or  rarely  rather  longer  than  the  leaves.  Bracteoles  none.  Calyx 
about  2 lines  long,  the  accessory  lobes  much  shorter  than  the  primary  ones. 
Petals  3 to  4 lines  long.  Fruiting-calyx  not  much  enlarged. — Blume,  Mus.  Bot. 
ii.  t.  43  ; Maclellandia  Griffithiana,  Wight,  Ic.  t.  1996. 

Hab.:  Tropical  seacoasts  and  adjoining  islands,  R.  Broum,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  v.  Mueller , 
M'Gillivray,  Leichhardt,  W.  Hill. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  the  seacoasts  of  tropical  Asia  and  the  Pacific  Islands. 

6.  LAGERSTRCEMIA,  Linn. 

(After  Magnus  Lagerstroem.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate-campanulate,  smooth  or  plicato-sulcate,  with  6 ovate 
subacute  lobes.  Petals  6,  sometimes  7 to  9 (or  none)  inserted  in  the  throat  of  the 
calyx,  obovate-oblong,  clawed,  and  wavy  or  curled.  Stamens  numerous,  inserted  near 
the  base  of  the  calyx-tube  ; filaments  long ; anthers  versatile,  didymous  or  oblong 
recurved.  Ovary  sessile  in  the  bottom  of  the  calyx,  3 to  6-celled.  Style  long, 
filiform,  flexuose  ; stigma  capitate  ; ovules  very  many,  ascending,  placentas  axile. 
Capsule  more  or  less  adnate  to  the  calyx,  ellipsoid,  coriaceous,  3 to  6-celled,  3 to 
6-valved.  Seeds  numerous  (seldom  few),  elongate,  flat,  erect,  winged  from  the 
summit. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  distichous  (or  the  uppermost 
alternate),  entire,  oblong  or  ovate.  Panicles  axillary  and  terminal,  usually 
trichotomous,  sometimes  dense.  Peduncles  2-bracteate  at  their  apex ; pedicels 
2-bracteolate.  Flowers  often  large  and  showy. 

Found  from  south-east  Asia  to  Australia,  Burma  being  the  centre  of  the  genus. — FI.  British 
India  (C.  B.  Clarke).  % 

Sect.  I.  Velagfa. — Calyx-tuhe  smooth,  neither  ribbed  nor  subulate. 

Petals  on  long  claws.  Capsule  nearly  globose.  Calyx-teeth  erect  on  the 

fruit 1.  L.  indica. 

Sect.  II.  Adambea.- Calyx-tube  grooved,  ribbed  or  subulate. 

Petiole  distinct,  usually  about  3 lines  long.  Calyx  covered  with  a hard 
white  or  ferruginous  tomentum  ; ribs  12  to  14,  flat  or  round,  not  acute  on 
the  back.  Petals  lin.  or  more  long;  apex  of  ovary  glabrous.  Fruit 

exceeding  lin.  long  and  almost  as  broad 2.  L.  Flos-Reyiiue. 

Petiole  3 lines  long.  Petals  with  claw  under  lin.  Fruit  about  8 lines  long 

and  half  as  broad 3.  L.  Archeriana. 


078 


LTII.  LYTHRARIEiE. 


[Ijayerstnenria. 


1.  X.  indica  (Indian),  Linn.;  ('.  B.  Clarke  in  Hook.  FI.  Brit.  hid.  ii.  575; 
F.  v.  M.  Frarfm.  viii.  35.  A showy  flowering  deciduous  shrub  of  several  feet  in 
height.  Leaves  about  2in.  long,  glabrous,  elliptic  or  oblong,  sessile,  acute  or 
somewhat  obtuse  at  each  end,  never  acuminate.  Panicle  loose,  minutely  pubes- 
cent or  glabrous.  Petals  bright  pink  in  the  normal  form.  Calyx-teeth  on  the 
fruit  long,  triangular,  erect  but  distant,  thin  not  woody.  Seed  lin.  including  its 
wing. — Lodd.  Bot.  Cab.  t.  1765  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  405  ; Wight  Illustr.  t.  80  ; /,. 
eler/ans,  Wall,  in  Paxt.  Mag.  Bot.  xiv.  269,  with  fig.;  Velaya  ylobosa,  Gfertn.  Fruct. 
t.  133,  Clarke  l.c. 

Hub.:  Cape  Sidmouth,  Dr.  D.  Curdie  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 

Most  likely  these  specimens  were  obtained  from  a shrub  that  had  been  planted.  It  may  be 
found  sometimes  in  old  deserted  gardens,  but  never,  I think,  indigenous  or  naturalised. 

2.  *X.  Flos-Reginae  (Queen’s  flower),  Retz.;  C.  B.  Clarke  in  Hook.  FI. 
Brit.  Ind.  ii.  577  ; F.  r.  M.  Fraym.  xii.  20.  A deciduous  tree,  attaining  the 
height  of  60ft.,  sometimes  when  old  having  on  its  trunk  and  larger  branches  a 
few  strong  straight  spines  1 to  3in.  Leaves  4 to  8in.  long,  from  broad -elliptic 
obtuse  to  long  lanceolate.  Panicles  large,  lower  branches  often  6in.  long,  curved, 
ascending,  flowers  scattered.  Petals  commonly  lin.,  sometimes  more,  mauve, 
margins  erose-undulate,  hardly  fimbriate.  Calyx  in  fruit  thickened,  woody;  lobes 
triangular,  spreading.  Fruit  large,  sometimes  reaching  l^-in.  by  lin. — -Wight  Ic. 
t.  413  ; Bedd.  FI.  Sylv.  t.  29  ; Adambea  ylabra,  Rheede  Hort.  Mai.  iv.  t.  20,  21. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Persich  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 

In  all  probability  the  specimens  sent  to  Baron  Mueller  were  obtained  off  an  introduced  plant. 

This  tree  in  India  is  said  to  attain  a large  size  and  furnish  a timber  almost  equal  to  Teak. 
Wood  shining,  light-red  ; hard. 

3.  L.  Archeriana  (after  the  Hon.  Archibald  Archer),  Bail.  Syn.  Ql.  FI. 
196  and  809.  A small  tree  with  a close  thin  smooth  whitish  bark,  but  usually 
met  with  as  a shrub,  attaining  the  height  of  15ft.,  of  bushy  habit,  the  lower 
branches  coming  in  contact  with  the  ground,  often  emitting  roots.  Branchlets 
tomentose.  Leaves  oblong,  ovate-lanceolate,  3 to  6in.  long  and  from  li  to  2|in. 
broad,  acuminate  at  the  apex,  rounded  at  the  base,  the  upper  side  nearly  glabrous, 
under  side  tomentose ; primary  nerves  confluent  within  the  margin,  reticulation 
fine ; petioles  about  3 lines  long.  Panicles  terminal,  clothed  with  a dense 
indumentum  of  variously  branched  hairs,  about  1ft.  long  and  rather  narrow, 
bearing  at  the  axils  of  the  branches  small  lanceolate  rusty- tomentose  leaves; 
lower  branches  3 to  5-flowered,  Flowers  lilac-purple.  Calyx  densely  tomentose 
outside,  glabrous  inside,  tube  about  3 lines  long,  with  6 prominent  ribs 
alternating  with  the  lobes  ; lobes  2 lines  long,  points  shortly  subulate,  recurved, 
midrib  prominent.  Petals  4 to  7,  much  crumpled,  nearly  orbicular,  about  4 lines 
diameter  on  a filiform  claw  of  4 lines.  Stamens  numerous,  anthers  bright- 
yellow.  Ovary  densely  hirsute  with  white  hairs.  Style  curved.  Capsule  opening 
in  6 valves,  oblong,  hairy,  6 to  8 lines  long,  3 to  4 broad.  Seeds  with  terminal 
wing. 

Hab.:  Palmer  River,  J.  C.  Baird. 

Wood  firm,  of  a brown  colour. — Bailey's  Cat.  QL  Woods  Xo.  231. 


7.  SONNERATIA,  Linn.  f. 

(After  M.  Sonnerat.) 

Calyx  thick,  the  tube  broadly  campanulate,  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base  ; 
lobes  4 to  8,  lanceolate  or  triangular,  the  sinuses  acute  without  accessory  lobes  or 
teeth.  Petals  4 to  8,  narrow,  or  none.  Stamens  numerous,  inserted  at  the  top 
of  the  calyx-tube,  inflected  in  the  bud.  Ovary  enclosed  in  and  partially  adnate  to 
the  calyx-tube,  depressed-globular,  10  to  15-celled;  style  elongated  with  a small 
capitate  stigma.  Fruit  large,  depressed,  fleshy  and  indehiscent,  surrounded  by 


Pl.XX/V. 


X agers  trcem/x/  A rch  er  tanka'  BoaV. 


GovfZttho.  Office 

Brisbane,.  <2. 


F C.  Wills. 


Sonnerntia.] 


LIII.  LYTHRARIEiE. 


679 


the  persistent  calyx,  and  adnate  to  it  at  the  base.  Seeds  immersed  in  pulp, 
angular,  with  a thick  testa.  Embryo  curved. — Glabrous  trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves 
opposite,  petiolate,  rather  thick.  Flowers  large,  solitary  or  3 together  in  the 
upper  axils  or  at  the  ends  of  the  branches. 

Besides  the  Australian  species,  which  is  spread  over  E.  India  and  the  Archipelago  and  extends 
to  eastern  Africa,  the  genus  contains  one  or  two  others  from  the  same  region. 

1.  S.  alba  (white),  Smith  in  Rees  Cyclop,  xxxiii.  No.  2 ; C.  B.  Clarke  in  Honk. 
FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  580.  “ Pornupan,”  Cooktown,  Roth.  A small  tree  growing 

among  mangroves,  the  branchlets  easily  disarticulating  at  the  joints  when  dry. 
Leaves  elliptic,  obtuse  or  obovate,  about  3in.  long,  narrowed  at  the  base  to  a 
petiole  of  2 or  3 lines.  Calyx  in  flower  exceeding  lin.  broad.  Style  long. 
Calyx-tube  6 to  8-angular,  lobes  6 to  8 ; no  petals.  Fruit  exceeding  lin.  broad  ; 
calyx  obconical  at  the  base,  ribbed. — -DC.  Prod.  iii.  231  ; Blume,  Mus.  Bot.  i. 
338 ; Miq.  FI.  Ind.  Bat.  i.  pt.  i.  497  ; Kurz  Fors.  FI.  i.  52S ; S.  mossambicensis, 
Klotzschin,  Peters  Reis.  Mosamb.  Bot.  t.  12;  S',  acida,  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
301 ; Hiern  in  Oliv.  FI.  Trop.  Afr.  ii.  483 ; Rump.  Amb.  iii.  t.  73. 

Hab.:  Johnstone  River,  Dr.  T.  I..  Bancroft,  and  other  similar  localities  in  tropical  Queenslan  1. 

This  species  was  united  with  S.  acida  by  Mr.  Bentham,  and  the  other  writers  at  Kew  have 
followed.  Mr.  Kurz  has  pointed  out  the  distinction  in  the  calyx,  and  there  is  a wide  difference 
between  the  fruits  so  far  as  at  present  known,  but  the  material  is  not  ample. — C.  B.  Clarke  l.c. 

From  the  large  lateral  roots,  which  often  extend  a considerable  distance  from  the  trunk,  are 
sent  up  erect  root-processes,  similar  to  those  formed  by  Avicennia  only  much  larger,  some 
measuring  as  much  as  6ft.  in  height  and  about  4in.  diameter  at  the  base,  tapering  to  about  lin. 
at  the  summit ; in  cases  where  the  tops  of  these  formations  have  been  broken  they  frequently 
fork,  but  never  seem  to  form  leaves  or  true  stems. 

Timber  used  for  making  canoes. — Roth. 


8.  *PUNICA,  Linn. 

(From  punicus,  of  Carthage.) 

Calyx-tube  funnel-shaped,  coriaceous,  adnate  to  the  ovary  below,  enlarged 
above  the  ovary  ; lobes  5 to  7,  persistent  on  the  fruit.  Petals  5 to  7,  lanceolate, 
wrinkled,  inserted  between  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  numerous,  inserted  round 
the  mouth  of  the  calyx.  Ovary  inferior,  with  many  cells  in  two  whorls ; style 
long,  bent,  stigma  capitate ; ovules  numerous,  placentas  in  some  cells  axile,  in 
others  parietal.  Berry  inferior,  globose,  many  celled.  Seeds  very  many,  angular, 
testa  coriaceous  with  a watery  outer  coat ; cotyledons  convolute. — Large  shrubs  ; 
branches  often  armed.  Leaves  opposite,  subopposite,  or  clustered,  oblong, 
obovate,  obtuse,  entire.  Flowers  shortly  pedicellate,  axillary,  solitary  or  clustered, 
large,  orange-red  or  creamy-white. 

1.  P.  Crranatum  (full  of  grains),  Linn.  Pomegranate.  A dense  shrub  or 
small  tree,  often  spinous,  deciduous.  Leaves  about  2in.  long  and  Jin.  broad, 
narrowed  towards  both  ends,  with  the  intramarginal  nerve  distinct  or  obscure. 
Calyx-lobes  about  lin.  long,  the  petals  longer.  Fruit  globose,  often  large,  the 
numerous  seeds  covered  with  a very  juicy  pulp,  which  is  sharply  acid  or  sweet. 

Hab.:  This  common  plant  of  India  and  Persia  has  strayed  from  cultivation  and  become 
naturalised  about  Bundaberg. — J.  Keys. 

Dr.  W.  Dymoek,  Veg.  Mat.  Med.  of  W.  India,  says  that  the  Arabs  recommend  the  root-bark  as 
being  the  most  astringent  part  of  the  plant,  and  a perfect  specific  in  cases  of  tapeworm ; it  is 
given  in  decoction,  prepared  with  two  ounces  of  fresh  bark,  boiled  in  a pint  and  a half  of  water 
till  but  three  quarters  of  a pint  remain  ; of  this,  when  cold,  a wineglassful  may  be  drunk  every 
half-hour  till  the  whole  is  taken.  This  dose  sometimes  sickens  the  stomach  a little,  but  seldom 
fails  to  destroy  the  worm,  which  is  soon  after  parsed. 

The  seeds  of  the  Pomegranate  are  considered  to  be  stomachic,  the  pulp  cardiacal  and 
stomachic.  The  root,  bark,  and  rind  of  the  fruit  are  officinal  in  the  Pharmacopoeia  of  India. 

The  bark  and  the  rind  of  the  fruit,  according  to  J.  S.  Gamble,  Manual  of  Ind'an  Timbers,  are 
used  for  tanning  and  for  dyeing  morocco  leather, 

Part  II.  aa 


680 


LIV.  ONAGRARIEiE. 


Order  LIV.  ONAGRARIEA3. 

Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary,  entirely  so  or  produced  above  it ; lobes  2 to  4, 
rarely  5 or  6,  valvate  in  the  bud.  Petals  as  many  as  calyx-lobes,  inserted  at  the 
top  of  the  calyx-tube,  rarely  wanting.  Stamens  as  many  or  twice  as  many  as 
petals,  or  fewer,  inserted  at  the  top  of  the  calyx-tube,  free  (except  in  a Mexican 
genus) ; anthers  from  ovate  to  linear,  versatile,  with  parallel  cells  opening  longi- 
tudinally. Ovary  inferior,  more  or  less  completely  divided  into  as  many  cells  as 
calyx-lobes,  or  rarely  1 -celled  ; style  filiform,  or  sometimes  very  short  or  scarcely 
any  ; stigma  entire  or  divided  into  as  many  lobes  as  cells  to  the  ovary.  Ovules 
usually  numerous,  in  1 or  2 rows  in  each  cell,  anatropous,  rarely,  in  genera  not 
Australian,  solitary.  Fruit  various,  in  the  Australian  genera  capsular  and 
elongated,  opening  from  the  apex  downwards  in  as  many  valves  as  cells,  or 
splitting  laterally  between  the  ribs  of  the  calyx.  Seeds  usually  small ; testa 
membranous,  coriaceous  or  rarely  spongy.  Albumen  none  or  exceedingly  thin. 
Embryo  usually  ovoid  ; cotyledons  plano-convex  (except  in  Trapa),  with  a very 
short  radicle. — Herbs,  annual  or  perennial,  or,  in  a few  genera  not  Australian, 
shrubs  or  even  trees.  Leaves  opposite  or  alternate,  without  stipules,  entire 
serrate  or  very  rarely  divided.  Flowers  usually  solitary  in  the  axils,  sometimes 
forming  leafy  racemes  or  spikes  at  the  ends  of  the  branches,  often  with  2 small 
bractooles  under  the  calyx. 

The  Order  is  dispersed  over  nearly  the  whole  surface  of  the  globe.  Of  the  4 Australian 
genera,  one,  Epilobium,  has  nearly  as  extensive  a range  as  the  whole  Order ; two,  Jussieea  and 
Ludwigia,  belong  chiefly  to  the  warmer  regions,  Ludwigia  extending  into  temperate  climates  ; 
the  fourth,  (Enothera,  is  almost  entirely  American. — Bentli. 


Calyx-tube  pruduced  above  the  ovary.  Capsule  opening  from  the  summit  down- 
wards. Seeds  naked.  Stamens  twice  as  many  as  calyx-lobes  or  petals  . . 1.  ‘(Enothera. 

Calyx-tube  not  produced  above  the  ovary. 

Capsule  opening  from  the  summit  downwards  in  4 valves.  Seeds  with  a tuft 

of  hairs.  Stamens  8.  Petals  4 2.  Epilobium. 

Capsule  opening  laterally  between  the  ribs  of  the  calyx  or  at  the  summit 
inside  the  calyx.  Seeds  naked. 

Stvmens  twice  as  many  as  calyx-lobes  or  petals 3.  Jussi.® a. 

Stamens  of  the  same  number  as  calyx-lobes  or  petals 4.  Ludwigia. 


1.  "CE  NOTH  ERA,  Linn. 

(From  uinus,  wine  ; and  therao,  to  chase.  The  roots  said  to  have  been  eaten  to 
chase  away  the  effects  of  wine.) 

Calyx- tube  more  or  less  produced  above  the  ovary  and  dilated  at  the  end  into  a 
4-lobed  limb,  the  whole  free  part  deciduous.  Petals  4.  Stamens  8,  inserted  at 
the  summit  of  the  calyx-tube  ; anthers  linear.  Ovary  4-celled,  with  many  ovules 
in  each  cell ; style  filiform  with  a capitate  clavate  or  4-lobed  stigma.  Capsule 
usually  opening  from  the  summit  downwards  loculicidally  in  4 valves  separating 
from  the  persistent  axis.  Seeds  without  any  tuft  of  hairs. — Herbs  or  rarely  small 
shrubs.  Lsaves  alternate,  or  rarely  the  lower  ones  opposite,  entire  or  variously 
toothed  or  lobed.  Flowers  axillary,  solitary  or  very  rarely  in  pairs,  sometimes 
forming  terminal  racemes  or  spikes,  rarely  contracted  into  heads. 

A large  American  genus,  chiefly  extratropical  or  Andine,  a very  few  species  now  naturalised 
in  various  parts  of  the  Old  World. 

1.  Q].  biennis  (biennial),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  46;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
302.  A biennial,  2 or  3ft.  high,  the  stems  almost  simple  and  more  or  less  hairy. 
Leaves  ovate-lanceolate  or  lanceolate,  slightly  toothed,  hoary  or  downy.  Flowers 
large,  yellow,  fragrant,  sessile  in  a long  terminal  spike  often  leafy  at  the  base, 


(Enothera .] 


LIV.  ONAGRARIEtE. 


681 


Ovary  and  adnate  part  of  the  calyx  about  6 to  8 lines  long,  the  free  part  of  the 
calyx-tube  at  least  lin.  long.  Petals  broad  and  spreading.  Stigma  divided  into 
4 linear  lobes.  Capsules  f to  lin.  long,  scarcely  angular. 

A plant  of  N.  American  origin,  long  cultivated  in  gardens  in  Europe  and  other  countries,  and 
readily  establishing  itself  in  waste  places  on  river  banks,  &c.  Naturalised  in  southern 
Queensland. 

2.  (E.  elata  (tall),  H.B.K.  Nov.  Gen.  et  Sp.  vi.  p.  90  f CE.  salicifolia,  Desf.) 
A tall  herbaceous  perennial  4 or  5ft.  high,  leaves  mostly  tufted  at  the  base, 
linear-lanceolate  and  distantly  toothed  and  with  the  stem  clothed  by  a canescent 
pubescence.  Petals  yellow,  roundish,  obovate,  retuse ; stamens  declinate,  about 
as  long  as  the  petals.  Capsule  sessile,  cylindrical,  slightly  angular,  clothed  by  a 
silky  villi. 

Hab.:  A plant  of  Mexico  and  Central  America  now  naturalised  or  a stray  from  cultivation  in 
Queensland. 


3.  (E.  longiflora  (long-flowered),  Jacq.  Evening  Primrose.  Plant  with 
erect  stem,  pilose.  Leaves  oblong  to  lanceolate,  denticulate.  Flowers  large,  bud 
erect ; free  part  of  the  calyx-tube  3 to  4 times  as  long  as  the  ovary,  filiform  ; 
petals  yellow,  nocturnal,  bilobed.  Stigma  4-parted ; divisions  elongated. 
Stamens  included.  Capsule  linear.  Seeds  minute,  scrobiculate. 

Hab.:  A plant  belonging  to  Buenos  Ayres,  which  has  become  naturalised  at  the  Warrego 
River,  from  whence  my  first  specimens  were  received  in  1387  from  Mr.  A.  P.  Jones.  It  is  also 
found  about  Toowoomba. 


2.  EPILOBIUM,  Linn. 

(Limb  of  calyx  surmounting  the  ovary.) 

Calyx-tube  not  at  all  or  scarcely  produced  above  the  ovary  ; lobes  4,  deciduous. 
Petals  4.  Stamens  8 ; anthers  linear  or  oblong.  Ovary  inferior,  4-celled,  with 
numerous  ovules  in  each  cell ; style  filiform ; stigma  entire  and  club-shaped  in 
the  Australian  species,  4-lobed  in  some  others.  Capsule  elongated,  opening 
loculicidally  in  4 valves  from  the  summit  downwards.  Seeds  small,  with  a tuft 
of  long  hairs  at  the  end. — -Herbs,  mostly  erect,  or  with  a decumbent  or  creeping 
base.  Leaves  opposite  or  irregularly  scattered.  Flowers  pink  or  red,  rarely 
white,  solitary  in  the  upper  axils  or  forming  a terminal  raceme. 

The  genus  is  diffused  over  nearly  the  whole  globe — from  the  extreme  Arctic  regions  of  both 
hemispheres  to  the  tropics.  The  numerous  forms  the  species  assume  in  every  variety  of  climate 
make  it  exceedingly  difficult  to  define  them  upon  any  certain  principle,  and  botanists  seldom 
agree  as  to  the  number  they  should  admit.  The  general  tendency  of  late  has  been  to  an  inordi- 
nate multiplication  of  supposed  species.  F.  v.  Mueller,  on  the  other  hand  (Veget.  Chath.  Isl.  15). 
proposes  to  reduce  the  whole  of  the  New  Zealand  and  Australian  species  to  the  Linnasan  E. 
tetragonuin,  a course  which  will  hardly  be  concurred  in  by  the  majority  of  botanists.  —Benth. 

Stems  erect,  or  decumbent  at  the  base  only. 

Flowers  small.  Calyx-lobes  under  3 lines  long  and  petals  not  twice 


as  long.  Stems  terete.  Pubescent  or  hoary.  Leaves  mostly  alter- 
nate and  narrow  1.  E.junceum. 

Flowers  large.  Calyx-lobes  3 lines  long  or  more.  Petals  twice  as 
long.  Leaves  mostly  oblong,  obtuse,  and  under  lin 2.  E.  Billardierianum. 


1.  E.  junceum  (Rush-like),  Forst.  in  Spreng.  Syst.  ii.  233  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  304.  Stems  from  a hard  decumbent  base,  erect,  terete,  hoary-tomentose  or 
softly  pubescent,  usually  1 to  2ft.  high  and  rigid,  but  smaller  and  slender  when 
starved.  Lowest  leaves  opposite,  the  upper  ones  and  often  nearly  all  alternate, 
sessile,  linear-oblong,  remotely  sinuate-toothed,  the  larger  ones  often  2in.  long  or 
more,  but  mostly  smaller  and  the  upper  floral  ones  often  very  much  reduced,  all 
hoary  or  pubescent.  Flowers  in  the  upper  axils  sometimes  quite  small,  but  the 
calyx-lobes  usually  2 to  nearly  3 lines  long,  the  petals  rather  longer,  the  pedicels 


G82 


LIV.  ONAGRARIEjE. 


[Epilobium. 


at  first  shorter  than  the  floral  leaves,  bat  lengthening;  much  after  flowering. 
Capsule  slender,  usually  about  2in.  long. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  118,  and  Handb. 
N.  Zeal.  FI.  80 ; E.  canescens,  Endl.  in  Hueg.  Enum.  44  ; Nees  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  15J. 

Hub.:  Plains  of  the  Condamine,  L •ichh  irdt : co  nraon  in  southern  localities,  on  damp  land. 

2.  E.  Billardierianum  (after  M.  Labillardiere),  Ser.  in  DC.  Prod.  iii.  41  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  305.  Glabrous  or  minutely  hoary-pubescent,  especially  in 
the  upper  portion.  Stems  usually  nearly  simple,  | to  Hft.  high,  terete  or  rarely 
with  short  faint  decurrent  lines  from  some  of  the  leaves.  Leaves  sessile  or 
nearly  so,  mostly  opposite,  except  the  floral  oues,  from  narrow  ovate-oblong  to 
linear-oblong,  obtuse,  more  or  less  toothed,  rarely  exceeding  lin.  Pedicels 
shorter  than  the  leaves  or  the  upper  ones  exceeding  them  when  in  fruit.  Calyx- 
lobes  about  3 lines  long  or  rather  more,  the  petals  usually  twice  as  long.  Capsule 
elongited. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  117  t.  21,  and  Handb.  N.  Zeal.  FI.  81. 

Hab.:  On  damp  land  in  southern  localities. 

3.  JUSSIZEA,  Linn. 

(After  the  celebrated  botanical  family  of  Jussieu.) 

Calyx-tube  not  produced  above  the  ovary  ; lobes  4,  5 or  rarely  6,  persistent. 
Petals  as  many  as  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  twice  as  many  as  calyx-lobes.  Ovary 
with  as  many  cells  as  calyx-lobes  and  numerous  ovules  in  each  cell ; style  short 
or  long  or  scarcely  any  ; stigma  more  or  less  lobed.  Capsule  terete  or  with  as 
many  or  twice  as  many  ribs  or  angles  as  calyx-lobes,  opening  septicidally  in 
valves  separating  from  the  persistent  ribs  or  irregularly  between  the  ribs.  Seeds 
usually  numerous  ; testa  thin  or  crustaceous,  or  thick  and  spongy. — Herbs,  some- 
times aquatic,  or  rarely  shrubs.  Leaves  alternate,  entire  or  very  rarely  serrate. 
Flowers  yellow  or  white,  solitary  in  the  axils  ; petals  usually  broad. 

The  genu?  is  chiefly  American,  both  tropical  and  extratropical,  a few  species  also  spread  over 
tropical  and  subtropical  Africa  and  Asia.  The  Australian  species  are  both  of  them  common  in 
the  New  as  well  as  the  Old  World. — Benth. 

Creeping  or  floating  plant.  Flowers  usually  5-merous,  on  pedicels  longer 

than  the  ovary 1 . J.  repens. 

Erect  plant.  Flowers  mostly  4-merous,  on  very  short  pedicels  or  almost 

sessile 2.  J.  suffruticosa. 

1.  J.  repens  (creeping),  Linn.  Spec.  PI.  555,  and  Mant.  381  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  306.  Herbaceous,  creeping  in  mud  or  floating  in  water,  often  sustain- 
ing itself  by  little  vesicles  round  the  insertion  of  the  leaves,  glabrous  or  more  or 
less  hirsute,  with  soft  spreading  hairs.  Leaves  from  obovate  or  obovate-oblong, 
to  narrow  cuneate-oblong  or  almost  lanceolate,  acute  or  rarely  obtuse,  the  upper 
ones  usually  1 to  2in.  long,  those  about  the  short  creeping  branches  often  very 
small.  Peduncles  usually  longer  than  the  ovary  and  fruit,  with  2 small  bracteoles 
at  the  summit.  Calyx-tube  or  ovary  cylindrical,  rather  slender,  under  ^-in.  long 
when  in  flower ; lobes  usually  5,  lanceolate,  acute,  3 to  4 lines  long.  Petals 
broadly  obovate,  from  a little  longer  to  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes.  Capsule 
lengthening  to  about  fin.,  and  about  lb  line  thick,  smooth  and  shining  but 
usually  sprinkled  with  a few  hairs,  the  5 primary  ribs  prominent,  the  secondary 
ones  less  so. — DC.  Prod.  iii.  54  ; Wight  in  Hook.  Bot.  Misc.  iii.  300  t.  Suppl.  40  ; 
J.  Swartziana,  DC.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Port  Curtis,  M'Gillivray ; common  in  lagoons  about  Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart. 

The  late  Baron  von  Mueller  was  of  opinion  that  J.  repens  of  the  FI.  Austr.  iii.  306  was  rather 
J.  diffusa,  Forst.,  under  which  it  is  given  in  his  Census  of  Austr.  Plants.  The  difference 
between  the  two  forms  or  species  is  principally  in  the  petals  of  J.  repens  being  white  except  at 
the  base,  which  is  slightly  yellow,  while  the  petals  of  J.  diffusa  are  all  yellow  (which  is  the 
case  with  all  the  plants  in  Queensland  waters  which  I have  seen).  I leave  the  plant  as  given 
by  Mr.  Bentham  in  the  FI.  Austr.,  not  considering  the  distinction  of  sufficient  importance  to 
make  a change,  particularly  as  I have  not  met  with  the  two  plants  in  Queensland,  and  to 
distinguish  the  colour  the  flowers  must  be  seen  in  a liye  state, 


Jussi  a:a.] 


LIV.  ONAGRARIEiE. 


683 


2.  J.  suffruticosa  (shrubby),  Linn.  Spec.  PL  555  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  307.  An  erect  branching  perennial,  attaining  2 or  3ft.,  the  base  of  the 
stem  often  bard  and  woody,  either  softly  pubescent  or  villous  in  all  its  parts  or 
rarely  almost  glabrous,  the  stem  often  angular.  Leaves  lanceolate  or  almost 
linear,  acute,  narrowed  at  (the  base,  the  larger  ones  2 to  4in.  long.  Pedicels 
much  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube  or  ovary,  the  bracteoles  reduced  to  small  glands 
or  wanting.  Calyx-tube  or  ovary  usually  about  Jin.  long  when  in  flower,  but  soon 
lengthening  out ; lobes  4 or  rarely  5,  lanceolate,  broad  or  narrow,  3 to  5 -nerved, 
4 to  5 lines  long.  Petals  broad,  exceeding  the  calyx-lobes.  Capsule  1J  to  2in. 
long,  usually  above  2 lines  broad,  tapering  to  the  base,  nearly  terete,  the  ribs 
scarcely  prominent. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  130 ; J.  villosa  and  J.  angustifolia, 
Lam.  Diet.  iii.  331  ; DC.  Prod.  iii.  55,  57  ; J.  villosa,  W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  336, 
with  the  synonyms  adduced  ; J.  suffruticosa  and  J.  angustifolia,  Griseb.  FI.  Brit. 
W.  Ind.  273,  with  the  numerous  synonyms  adduced. 

Hab.:  Broadsound  and  Northumberland  Islands,  R.  Brown;  Lizard  Island,  M'Gillivray ; 
Burnett  River,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Burdekin  River,  Bowman;  Rockhampton,  Dallachy ; Brisbane 
River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

The  species  is  common  in  most  tropical  countries.  The  nearly  glabrous  forms  distinguished 
sometimes  as  J.  angustifolia  seem  frequently  to  pass  into  the  villous  ones  in  most  localities. 
In  Queensland,  the  two  forms  are  equally  abundant  in  wet  places. 


4.  LUDWIGI A,  Linn. 

(After  C.  G.  Ludwig.) 

Calyx-tube  not  produced  above  the  ovary;  lobes  4,  5 or  rarely  3,  persistent  or 
at  length  deciduous.  Petals  as  many  as  calyx-lobes  or  sometimes  none.  Stamens 
as  many  as  calyx-lobes.  Ovary  with  as  many  cells  as  calyx-lobes,  and  numerous 
ovules  in  each  cell  ; stigma  sessile  or  nearly  so,  capitate,  furrowed  or  obscurely 
lobed.  Capsule  angular  or  terete,  much  longer  than  broad,  opening  either  in 
terminal  pores  or  irregularly  along  the  sides  between  the  ribs.  Seeds  small, 
numerous,  without  any  tuft  of  hairs. — Annual  or  perennial  herbs,  sometimes 
somewhat  woody  at  the  base.  Leaves  alternate  or  the  lower  ones  (in  species  not 
Australian)  opposite.  Flowers  axillary,  sessile  or  nearly  so,  or  rarely  distinctly 
pedicellate.  Petals  usually  very  small. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  the  warmer  and  temperate  regions  of  the  globe  ; the  only 
Australian  species  is  a common  Asiatic  and  African  one. 

1.  Zi.  parviflora  (flowers  small),  Pu>xb.  FI.  Ind.  i.  419;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  307.  An  erect  or  diffuse  glabrous  annual,  rarely  above  lt't.  high.  Leaves 
alternate,  lanceolate,  or,  in  most  of  the  Australian  specimens,  linear,  entire,  1 to 
2 or  even  3in.  long,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole.  Flowers  very  small,  solitary 
in  the  axils,  sessile  or  very  shortly  pedicellate.  Calyx-tube  (or  ovary)  at  the  time 
of  flowering,  rarely  1J  line  long,  but  very  rapidly  enlarging;  lobes  usually  4 in 
the  Indian  specimens,  more  frequently  5 in  the  Australian  ones,  small  and  very 
acute.  Petals  not  exceeding  the  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  rather  shorter.  Stigma 
large,  capitate.  Capsule  4 to  6 lines  long  and  1J  line  broad  when  attaining  its 
full  size,  but  often  ripening  much  smaller.— Wight,  Illustr.  t.  101. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  A.  Cunningham;  Burdekin  River,  Bowman;  and  on  wet  land  in 
many  other  tropical  localities. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  tropical  Asia  and  Africa.  Amongst  the  synonyms  quoted  by- 
Wight  and  Arnott,  Prod.  336,  are  L.  diffusa,  Hamilt.  in  Trans.  Linn.  Hoc.  xiv.  301,  and  L. 
perennix,  Linn.  Spec.  PI.  173.  These  are  copied  by  Miquel  into  his  FI.  Ind.  Bat.  i.  part  i.  620, 
and  observing  that  one  of  them  is  an  old  name  of  Linnaeus’s,  he,  without  further  inquiry  (except 
perhaps  a glance  at  Rheede’s  fig.  of  Caramha,  Hort.  Malab.  ii.  t.  49,  cited  by  Linnaeus,  which  is 
the  true  L.  parviflora),  adopts  this  name  of  L.  perennix  for  the  species,  and  Miquel’s  example  is 
followed  by  F.  v.  Mueller,  Fragm.  iii.  129.  But  not  only  is  Linnaeus’s  name  wholly  inappli  -able 
to  a plant  so  constantly  and  evidently  annual,  but  so  is  also  his  specific  character  “ t'oliis 
oppositis  floribus  pedicellatus,”  and  as  to  the  reference  to  Rheede’s  Caramba,  he  expressly 


684 


LlV.  ONAGRARIEjE. 


[Ludwigia. 

rejects  it  in  his  Mantissa,  p.  332,  as  pointed  out  in  DC.  Prod.  iii.  59.  Although,  therefore, 
Linnaeus  may  have  confounded  this  plant  with  some  other,  it  is  certainly  not  the  one  he  had  in 
view  in  characterising  his  L.  perennis,  and  Arnott  and  others  are  fully  justified  in  adopting 
Roxburgh’s  L.  parviflora.  As  to  L.  diffusa,  Hamilt.,  although  he  also  thought  Rheede’s  Caramba 
might  be  the  same,  it  is  in  fact  quite  distinct  in  the  long  slender  ovary  and  capsule,  and  in  some 
measure  in  inflorescence.  It  is  L.  prostrata,  Roxb.  FI.  Ind.  i.  420  ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  7G2,  and 
includes  the  three  species  of  Nematopyxis,  described  by  Miquel  FI.  Ind.  Bat.  i.  part  i.  630.  It 
has  not  yet  been  found  in  Australia. — Bcntli. 


Order  LV.  SAMYDACE.E. 

Sepals  free  or  united  at  the  base  into  a 4 or  5-lobed  (rarely  2,  3 or  6 or  more 
lobed)  calyx,  free  from  the  ovary  or  more  or  less  adherent.  Petals  either  as  many 
as  the  sepals  or  calyx-lobes,  inserted  at  their  base,  persistent  with  them,  and 
resembling  them  in  consistence,  or  wanting.  Stamens  perigynous,  indefinite  or 
not  corresponding  in  number  with  the  calyx-lobes,  or,  if  equal  to  them,  usually 
opposite  the  petals  and  alternating  with  small  glands  or  scales.  Ovary  superior 
or  more  or  less  inferior,  with  2,  3 or  more  parietal  placentas  and  several  ovules  to 
each  placenta  ; style  entire  or  more  or  less  divided  into  as  many  branches  as 
placentas.  Fruit  indehiscent  or  opening  in  valves  between  the  placentas.  Seeds 
often  arillate,  with  a fleshy  albumen.  Embryo  straight  or  nearly  so,  with  the 
radicle  next  the  hilum  and  flat  cotyledons. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  alternate, 
undivided,  usually  toothed.  Stipules  small  or  none.  Flowers  hermaphrodite  or 
rarely  dioecious. 

A considerable  Order,  if  taken  with  the  limits  above  given,  and  widely  distributed  over  the 
New  and  the  Old  World,  chiefly  within  the  tropics. 

Tribe  I.  Casearieae.  —Leaves  alternate.  Calyx  4 to  5-merous.  Petals  none.  Stamens  6 
to  15,  springing  from  the  margin  of  the  flower-tube  in  a single  row.  Staminodes  equal  in  number 
to  the  fertile  stamens,  and  alternating  with  them. 

Stamens  6 to  15,  combined  into  a tube  below.  Style  simple,  3-lobed  or  entire  at 

the  apex.  Flowers  tufted 1.  Casearia. 

Tribe  II.  Komalieae. — Leaves  alternate.  Flower-tube  free  or  more  or  less  adnate  to  the 
ovary.  Sepals  and  petals  4 to  15,  distinct.  Stamens  equal  in  number  to  the  petals,  opposite  to 
them,  or  more  numerous  and  collected  in  tufts  in  front  of  them,  alternating  with  glands  placed 
opposite  to  the  sepals. 

Ovary  more  or  less  adherent.  Petals  flat,  as  many  as  sepals 2.  Homalium. 

1.  CASEARIA,  Linn. 

(After  J.  Casearius.) 

Calyx-lobes  4 or  5.  Petals  none.  Stamens  6 to  15  or  rarely  more,  alternating 
with  as  many  short  ciliate  or  hairy  scales  (staminodia  ?),  all  in  a single  series  and 
united  in -a  perigynous  ring  at  the  base.  Ovary  superior,  1-celled,  with  3 or  rarely 
4 parietal  placentas  ; style  entire  or  shortly  3-lobed.  Fruit  somewhat  succulent, 
opening  in  valves  or  more  fleshy  and  indehiscent.  Seeds  often  with  an  arillus. — 
Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  usually,  but  not  always  dotted  with  a mixture  of  round 
and  oblong  transparent  dots.  Stipules  lateral.  Flowers  usually  small  in  axillary 
clusters. 

A considerable  genus,  chiefly  American,  with  a few  African  and  Asiatic  species. 


Leaves  not  dotted.  Stamens  8 C.  csculenta. 

Leaves  pellucid-dotted.  Stamens  10  to  12 2.  C.  Dallachii. 


1.  C.  esculenta  (used  for  food),  Roxb.  FI.  Ind.  ii.  422;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  309.  A large  shrub,  usually  quite  glabrous,  the  branches  not  angular. 
Leaves  from  oval-elliptical  to  nearly  oblong,  acuminate,  narrowed  at  the  base,  2 
to  4in.  long  or  sometimes  rather  more,  scarcely  coriaceous,  but  not  dotted. 
Flowers  very  small,  in  axillary  clusters,  the  pedicels  about  1 line  long.  Calyx 


Caseuria.] 


LV.  SAMYDACEjE. 


685 


glabrous,  rather  above  1 line  diameter  when  open,  5-lobed.  Stamens  8, 
alternating  with  as  many  short  truncate  staminodia,  usually  scarcely  pubescent. 
Ovary  glabrous,  tapering  into  a short  style  ; stigma  entire.  Placentas  3,  the 
ovules  not  numerous. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

The  species  to  which  this  plant  seems  referable  is  widely  spread  over  E.  India.  It  may  be 
the  same  as  C.  ovata,  Willd.,  and  C.  zeylanica,  Thw.,  as  doubtfully  suggested  by  Thwaites, 
Enum.  Ceyl.  PL  19,  but  both  of  those  appear  to  have  the  ovary  hirsute. — Benth. 

C.  B.  Clarke,  in  Hooker’s  FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  592,  considers  the  Queensland  C.  esculenta  as 
identical  with  the  Ceylon  var.  angusta  of  that  species. 

2.  C.  Dallachii  (after  J.  Dallachy),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  107  and  214 ; 
Bcntli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  809.  A small  tree  nearly  glabrous.  Leaves  shortly 

petiolate,  ovate,  shortly  acuminate,  3 to  4in.  long,  pellucid-dotted,  minutely 
tomentose  near  the  base  or  quite  glabrous.  Flowers  densely  clustered,  hoary- 
pubescent,  the  pedicels  shorter  than  the  calyx.  Calyx-segments  5,  orbicular, 
about  1 line  long.  Stamens  10  to  12,  alternating  and  more  or  less  united  with 
as  many  staminodia,  which  are  bearded  at  the  end.  Ovary  more  or  less  hirsute 
at  the  top ; style  very  short  and  thick,  with  a large  undivided  stigma.  Placentas 
3.  Fruit  red,  or  rarely  yellow,  ^in.  long,  oval,  6-angled,  indehiscent  or  shortly 
3-valved  at  the  apex.  Seeds  10  or  fewer,  ovate-globose,  angular,  1-1  line  long  ; 
testa  smooth,  brown. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy. 

Very  nearly  allied  to  C.  glabra,  Roxb.  (which  appears  to  be  a variety  only  of  the  common 
Indian  C.  tomentosa),  differing  in  the  rather  thicker  calyx-lobes  and  more  numerous  stamens. — 
Benth. 

C.  B.  Clarke,  in  Hook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  593,  places  this  species  under  C.  tomentosa , Roxb. 

2.  HOMALIUM,  Jacq. 

(From  the  stamens  being  equal  in  number  to  the  petals.) 

(Blackwellia,  Juss.) 

Calyx-tube  turbinate  or  oblong,  adherent  to  the  ovary  at  the  base  ; lobes  4 to 
12.  Petals  as  many  as  calyx-lobes.  Stamens  1 or  more  opposite  each  petal, 
with  1 gland  opposite  each  calyx-lobe.  Ovary  1-celled,  adherent  in  the  lower 
part,  conical  and  free  in  the  upper  portion,  crowned  with  3 to  5 styles,  either  free 
or  united  into  one  ; placentas  as  many  as  styles,  in  the  upper  free  part  of  the 
ovary,  with  2 to  6,  usually  4 ovules  to  each.  Fruit  slightly  enlarged,  surrounded 
by  the  persistent  calyx-lobes  and  petals,  and  usually  opening  at  the  top  in  short 
valves  between  the  placentas. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  not  dotted.  Flowers  in 
axillary  spikes  or  racemes,  or  in  terminal  panicles. 

A considerable  tropical  genus,  chiefly  Asiatic  and  African,  with  a few  American  species.  Of 
the  3 Queensland  species,  one  is  also  in  the  islands  of  the  South  Pacific,  the  others  are  endemic. 


Leaves  and  flower-spikes  above  2in.  long.  Calyx-segments  usually  8 to 
10,  with  as  many  petals  of  about  the  same  size.  Stamens  2 or  3 

opposite  each  petal 1.  H.  vitiense. 

Racemes  3 to  4in.  long.  Calyx-lobes  5 to  6 2.  H.  circumpinnatum. 

Leaves  and  flower-spikes  under  2in.  long.  Calyx-segments  usually  5. 

Petals  as  many  but  larger.  Stamens  solitary,  opposite  each  petal  . . 3.  H.  brachybotrys. 


1.  H.  vitiense  (of  Viti),  Benth.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  iv.  36;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  310.  A tree,  glabrous  except  the  inflorescence,  or  rarely  a few 
appressed  hairs  on  the  under  side  of  the  leaves.  Leaves  broadly  ovate,  obtuse 
or  very  shortly  and  obtusely  acuminate,  irregularly  and  often  obscurely  sinuate- 
crenate  or  undulate,  2 to  4in.  long,  on  petioles  of  from  a to  iin.  or  rarely  longer. 
Flowers  very  nearly  sessile,  in  simple  or  branched  spikes,  varying  from  2 or  3in. 
long  and  rather  dense,  to  twice  that  length  and  interrupted,  the  rhachis  and 
flowers  more  or  less  pubescent.  Calyx- tube  narrow-turbinate,  ^ to  f line  long  ; 


LV.  SAMYDACEiE. 


[lionudiuin. 


686 

lobes  8 to  10  (or  rarely  6 or  7 ?),  linear  ; petals  as  many,  scarcely  more  cuneate, 
giving  the  whole  flower  the  appearance  of  a 16  to  20-lobed  calyx,  the  enlarged 
calyx-lobes  and  petals  after  flowering  about  14  line  long  and  ciliate-hirsute. 
Stamens  in  pairs  or  8 together  opposite  each  petal. — H.  alnifolium,  F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  ii.  127. 

Hab.:  Rockhampton,  Dallachy. 

Also  in  New  Caledonia  and  the  Fiji  Islands. 

The  leaves  in  the  Australian  specimens  are  rather  larger  and  more  coriaceous  than  in  those 
from  the  Fiji  Islands,  but  are  precisely  as  in  New  Caledonian  specimens  collected  by  Deplanche 
and  Vieillard  under  Nos.  23  and  2070,  and  referred  by  them  to  H.  tomentosum,  Benth.,  from 
which  they  differ  both  in  flowers  and  foliage.  H.  vitiense  is  much  more  nearly  allied  to  H. 
fatidum. — Benth. 

Wood  white,  close  in  grain  ; suitable  for  cabinet-work. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  232. 

2.  H.  circumpinnatum  (flowers  resembling  a miniature  shuttlecock),  Bail. 
But.  Bull.  v.  “ Darrinjar,”  Cairns,  E.  Cowley.  Shuttlecock  Flower.  A tall 
glabrous  shrub,  with  the  branchlets  closely  dotted  with  lenticels.  Leaves 
lanceolate  or  ovate-lanceolate,  3 or  4in.  long,  f to  lfin.  wide  in  the  centre,  the 
margins  often  sharply  toothed;  petiole  seldom  over  Jin.  long;  texture  thin, 
coriaceous;  primary  nerves  distant,  reticulations  fine  and  prominent.  Racemes 
slender,  terminal  or  in  the  upper  axils,  3 or  4in.  long,  sometimes  once  forked 
near  the  end,  but  the  branches  closely  appressed  to  each  other.  Peduncle, 
pedicel,  and  rhachis  puberulous  ; pedicels  persistent,  about  1 line  long,  subtended 
by  a setaceous  bract  nearly  as  long.  Flowers  grey,  hairy,  about  3 lines  diameter, 
tapering  into  a long  calyx-tube  ; calyx-lobes  5 or  6 linear.  Petals  5 or  6,  some- 
what spathulate  ; stamens  2 or  3,  opposite  each  petal ; filaments  hairy  in  the 
lower  half,  the  ovary  not  so  densely.  Styles  5. 

Hab.:  Cairns,  E.  Cowley. 

This  species  differs  from  H.  vitiense,  Benth.,  in  its  smaller  stature,  less  hairy  pedicellate 
flowers,  and  smaller  setaoeous  bracts,  and  from  H.  brachybotrys,  F.  v.  M.,  in  its  larger  flowers 
and  greater  number  of  stamens. 

Wood  of  a yellow  colour,  close-grained,  and  hard. — Bailey’s  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  231a. 

3.  H.  brachybotrys  (bunches  short),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  127  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  310.  Glabrous  or  nearly  so,  except  the  inflorescence.  Leaves  oval- 
elliptical  or  obovate,  obtuse,  entire  or  obscurely  sinuate,  rarely  exceeding  2in. 
and  mostly  about  lin.  long,  narrowed  into  a petiole,  drying  of  a paler  colour  than 
most  of  the  genus.  Flowers  very  small,  sessile,  in  simple  slender  spikes  of 
about  lin.,  the  rhachis  pubescent  as  well  as  the  flowers.  Calyx-tube  ovoid,  about 
J line  long  ; lobes  6,  narrow-linear,  rather  shorter  than  the  tube.  Petals  6, 
oblong  or  spathulate,  rather  longer  and  much  broader  than  the  calyx-lobes. 
Stamens  solitary  opposite  each  petal,  alternating  with  small  tufts  of  hairs ; 
filaments  glabrous,  about  as  long  as  the  petals.  Styles  and  placentas  4.  Ovary 
woolly-hairy,  conical. — Blackwellia  brachyhotrya,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Viet. 
Inst.  iii.  48. 

Hab  : Granite  rocks,  sources  of  the  Gilbert  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Walsh  River,  T.  Barclay 
Millar. 


Order  LVI.  PASSIFLORE^E. 

Calyx-tube  short  or  rarely  elongated  ; lobes  4 or  5,  valvate  or  more  or  less 
imbricate  in  the  bud,  often  coloured  inside.  Petals  as  many  as  calyx-lobes, 
inserted  at  their  base  and  alternating  with  them,  often  persistent  with  them  and 
much  resembling  them,  sometimes  small  or  rarely  wanting.  Stamens  usually  as 
many  as  calyx-lobes,  rarely  twice  as  many,  inserted  at  the  base  of  the  calyx,  but 
often  connate  with  the  ovary-stalk  to  near  the  top  and  appearing  to  be  there 
inserted.  Ovary  usually  stalked,  1-celled,  with  3 or  rarely  5 parietal  placentas, 


Pl.XXV. 


Ho rrvaliu rru  circixn ifririnsj±iurn, 


GovlJLtHio  Offuu 

JZrisbans..  & 


F.  C Willy 


LVI.  PASSIFLOREiE. 


687 


each  with  several  ovules.  Style  divided  into  as  many  branches  as  there  are 
placentas,  with  terminal  stigmas.  Fruit  indehiscent  and  succulent  or  opening  in 
valves  between  the  placentas.  Seeds  often  arillate  ; albumen  fleshy.  Embryo 
straight,  with  leafy  cotyledons,  the  radicle  next  the  hilum. — Climbers,  or  rarely, 
in  genera  not  Australian,  erect  herbs  or  shrubs.  Leaves  alternate,  entire  or 
divided,  with  stipules.  Flowers  hermaphrodite  or  unisexual,  solitary  or  in  cymes 
or  racemes,  on  axillary  peduncles.  Tendrils  axillary,  often  accompanying  or 
terminating  the  peduncles. 

The  Order  is  dispersed  over  the  tropical  and  subtropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old 
World.  Of  the  2 Australian  genera,  one  is  almost  entirely  American,  the  other  is  also  in 
Africa  and  Asia. 

Tribe  I.  Passifloreae.—  Flowers  hermaphrodite.  Petals  distinct  or  wanting.  Corona 
conspicuous , in  one  or  more  rows.  Styles  consolidated  or  distinct. 

Stamens  hypogynous 1.  Passielora. 

Tribe  II.  IVIodecceae. — Flowers  unisexual,  rarely  hermaphrodite.  Petals  distinct,  usually 
inconspicuous.  Corona  inconspicuous  or  wanting. 

Flowers  unisexual.  Stamens  perigynous ; anthers  2-celled 2.  Mohecca. 

Tribe  III.  Papayaceae. — Flowers  unisexual  or  a few  hermaphrodite  in  the  panicles,  Male 
and  female  perianths  dissimilar.  Calyx  minute.  Corolla,  male  tubular,  female  5-petalous. 
Stamens  2-seriate,  inserted  in  the  corolla-tube.  Trees  small,  erect ; sap  milky  . 3.  *Carica. 


1.  PASSIFLORA,  Linn. 

(Passion  Flower.) 

(Disemma,  Labill.;  Murucuja,  Pers.j 

Calyx-tube  short.  Petals  rarely  wanting  and  often  like  the  calyx  lobes.  One 
or  several  rings  of  coloured  filaments  or  appendages  forming  a corona  within  the 
petals.  Stamens  as  many  as  calyx-lobes,  so  united  with  the  ovary-stalk  as  to 
appear  to  be  inserted  at  or  near  its  summit.  Styles  3,  with  large  capitate  stigmas. 
Fruit  succulent  or  pulpy,  indehiscent,  or  opening  obscurely  in  3 valves. — Climbers 
with  axillary  tendrils.  Leaves  entire  or  palmately  lobed  or  divided.  Flowers 
usually  hermaphrodite,  the  calyx-lobes  coloured  inside  nearly  or  quite  as  much  as 
the  petals. 

The  species  are  numerous  in  tropical  or  subtropical  America,  with  a very  few  from  Africa, 
Asia,  and  the  Pacific  Islands. 

Sect.  I.  Dysosmia. — Flowers  5-merous.  Peduncles  solitary,  l glowered . Corona  3 to  5- 
seriate.  Petioles  with  or  without  glands.  Bracts  3,  lacerated. 

Glandularly  hairy.  Leaves  entire  or  3-lobed.  Petioles  without  glands. 

Stipules  very  much  divided.  Flowers  white.  Fruit  inflated  ...  1.  P.foetida. 

Sect.  II.  Cicca. — Flowers  5-merous.  Peduncles  frequently  solitary,  1- flowered.  Corona  3 
rarely  2-seriate.  Petals  none.  Bracts  minute  or  none.  Petioles  2-glandular. 

Nearly  glabrous.  Leaves  3-lobed.  Petiole  with  dark  glands.  Flowers 

greenish.  Fruit  4 to  6 lines  diameter,  very  dark 2.  P.  suberosa. 

Sect.  III.  G-ranadilla. — Flowers  5-merous.  Peduncles  axillary,  1 -flowered.  Petioles 
glanduliferous.  Bracts  3,  large.  Corona  3 to  5-seriate.  Stipules  often  foliuceous. 

Branches  4-angular.  Petioles  6-glandular.  Leaves  roundish-ovate. 

Stipules  large.  Flowers  large.  Petals  rosy.  Corona  violet  ...  3.  P.  quadrangu laris. 
Glaucous.  Leaves  3-lobed  with  a glandular  serration  at  base  of  lobes. 

Petiole  with  2 glands  near  the  middle.  Stipules  cordate.  Flowers  white  4.  P.  alba. 

Leaves  3-lobed  ; lobes  serrated.  Petiole  glands  2,  near  the  top.  Flowers 

white.  Fruit  purple  when  ripe 5.  P.  edulis. 

Sect.  IV.  DiBeiMBa.  — Flowers  5-merous.  Petals  5.  Corona  '2-seriate,  the  inner  one  united 
in  a crcnate  or  shortly-lobed  ring  or  tube. 

Pubescent.  Leaf-lobes  rather  acute.  Inner  ring  of  the  corona  connivent 

or  contracted  at  the  top 6.  P.  Herbertiana. 

Glabrous.  Leaf-lobes  usually  obtuse.  Inner  ring  of  the  corona  erect 
and  plicate,  scarcely  contracted  at  the  top. 

Calyx  1J  to  2in.  long 

Calyx  under  lin.  long 


7.  P.  aurantia. 

8.  P.  brachystephana. 


688 


LVl.  PASSIFLOREjE. 


[Passijiora. 


1.  *P.  foetida  (fetid),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  331  ; Bot.  lie;/,  t.  321  ; Dot. 
May.  t.  2619  ; Benth.  FI.  Honyk.  123.  A herbaceous  climber,  usually  very  hairy. 
Leaves  stalked,  cordate,  and  mostly  3-lobed,  2 to  3in.  long,  softly  villous  on  both 
sides.  Stipules  fringed  with  hair-like  lobes,  tipped  with  a small  gland.  Peduncles 
axillary,  1 to  2in.  long,  bearing  a single  flower,  closely  surrounded  and  almost 
enclosed  in  a moss-like  involucre,  consisting  of  3 bracts  very  much  divided  into 
hair-like  glandular  lobes.  Petals  pale  purplish-white,  spreading  to  about  2in. 
diameter. 

Hab.:  A South  American  plant  which  has  become  naturalised  in  Queensland  and  many  other 
warm  countries. 

2.  *P,  suberosa  (corky  stem),  Linn.,  var.  minima  (least).  A slender-  stemmed 
climber  with  dark-green  foliage.  Leaves  glabrous,  5-nerved  at  the  base,  ovate, 
somewhat  cordate,  3-lobed ; lobes  ovate,  mucronate.  Petioles  biglandular  at  the 
apex  or  above  the  middle,  often  ciliate.  Flowers  yellowish-green,  the  inner  rim 
of  corona  purplish.  Fruit  globose,  about  4 to  6 lines  diameter,  when  ripe  very 
dark. 

Hab.:  A Brazilian  climber  naturalised  in  many  localities. 

3.  ::P.  quadrangularis  (four-angular  stem),  Linn.  The  large  Granadilla. 
A strong  glabrous  climber.  Stems  quadrangular,  almost  or  quite  winged.  Leaves 
ovate-roundish,  sub-cordate  at  the  base,  mucronate,  quite  entire,  arch-veined,  the 
petiole  with  usually  3 pairs  of  glands  near  the  summit.  Stipules  large,  ovate  or 
ovate-oblong.  Involucre  of  3 bracts.  Flowers  large,  variegated,  very  fragrant 
and  showy,  the  petals  rosy,  corona  violet.  Fruit  oblong. 

Hab.:  This  South  American  climber  has  become  naturalised  in  some  of  the  scrubs  of  northern 
Queensland. 

4.  ::P.  alba  (flowers  white)  Link  and  Otto.  Branches  striate.  Leaves 
distant,  24  to  3in.  long,  3in.  broad,  glaucous,  five-nerved,  3-lobed,  lobes  mucronate 
and  glandular-serrate  at  the  base.  Petioles  about  14in.  long,  with  2 glands  about 
the  middle  and  1 or  2 higher  up.  Stipules  large,  oblong-cordate.  Flowers  white. 
Petals  membranous,  linear-oblong.  Corona  filaments  in  several  series.  Fruit 
oval,  about  Hin.  long. 

Hab.:  This  Brazilian  climber  has  become  naturalised  in  many  localities. 

5.  *P.  edulis  (edible),  Sims.  Bot.  May.  t.  1989.  Common  Passion  Fruit. 
A tall  leafy  climber.  Leaves  glabrous,  3-lobed,  serrated  ; petioles  biglandular  at 
the  apex.  Bracts  glandularly  serrated.  Flowers  whitish.  Corona  about  equal 
in  length  to  the  calyx-lobes.  Ovary  glabrous.  Fruit  elliptic,  size  of  a hen’s  egg, 
purplish  outside  when  ripe,  the  pulp  of  a somewhat  orange  colour. — Mart.  FI. 
Braz.  xiii.,  pt.  1,  pi.  122. 

Hab.:  This  Brazilian  plant  has  become  naturalised  in  both  north  and  south  Queensland. 

6.  P.  Herbertiana  (after  Lady  Carnarvon),  Lindl.  Bot.  Rey.  t.  737  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  311.  A tall  robust  climber,  more  or  less  pubescent.  Leaves 
broad,  truncate  or  slightly  cordate  at  the  base,  larger  than  in  P.  aurantia,  often 
3in.  long  or  more,  with  3 broad  triangular  almost  acute  lobes,  pubescent  on  both 
sides  (sometimes  minutely  so),  the  petiole  with  2 glands  very  near  the  summit  or 
sometimes  w.anting.  Flowers  solitary  or  in  pairs,  rather  large,  on  pedicels  much 
shorter  than  the  leaves,  with  2 or  3 scattered  setaceous  bracteoles  at  or  below  the 
middle.  Calyx-lobes  nearly  14in.  long,  of  a greenish-white  or  pale  orange-yellow. 
Petals  narrow,  scarcely  more  than  half  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes.  Inner  corona 
about  4in.  long,  broadly  tubular  but  contracted  at  the  orifice,  crenate  or  shortly 
lobed  ; outer  corona  rather  shorter,  of  a single  row  of  filaments.  Gynophore 


Passiflora.) 


LVT.  PASSIFLOREiE.  689 

rather  shorter  than  the  calyx-lobes.  Fruit  green,  about  2in.  long,  oval.  Seeds 
very  dark,  foveolate-rugose. — Disemma  Herbertiana,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  832  ; F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  ix.  68. 

Hab.:  Brisbane- River,  Moreton  to  Rockingham  Bay. 

7.  P.  aurantia  (orange-coloured),  Forst.  Quite  glabrous.  Leaves  broad, 
usually  under  3in.  long,  with  3 broad  obtuse  lobes  rarely  divided  to  the 
middle  of  the  leaf,  and  each  lobe  occasionally  sinuate  or  more  or  less  distinctly 
2 or  3-lobed,  the  petiole  with  2 glands  very  near  or  distant  from  the  summit, 
very  rarely  obscure  or  altogether  wanting.  Flowers  rather  large,  sometimes  pale 
when  they  first  open  but  soon  assuming  a brick-red  ctr  dull  scarlet  colour,  on 
pedicels  much  shorter  than  the  leaves,  with  2 or  3 scattered  setaceous  bracteoles 
at  or  below  the  middle.  Calyx-lobes  about  ljin.  long  or  rather  more.  Petals 
narrow,  scarcely  more  than  half  as  long  as  the  calyx-lobes.  Inner  corona  broadly 
tubular,  slightly  contracted,  plicate  and  shortly  lobed  at  the  orifice ; outer  corona 
about  the  same  length,  of  a single  row  of  filaments.  Ovary-stalk  longer  than  the 
petals,  shorter  than  the  calyx-lobes.  Fruit  oval,  about  l^in.  long.— P.  coccinea, 
Soland.  in  Herb.  Banks,  not  of  Aubl.;  Disemma  coccinea,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  333 ; 
P.  Banksii,  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  312. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander,  A.  Cunningham ; Keppel  Bay,  R.  Brown; 
Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham  and  others;  islands  of  the  coast,  M'GiUivray, 
Henne. 

8.  P.  brachystephana  (crown  short),  F.  v.  M.  Glabrous,  like  P. 
aurantia.  Leaves  smaller  but  otherwise  precisely  the  same.  Flowers  also 
differing  only  in  size.  Calyx  under  lin.  long.  Petals  less  than  half  as  long. 
Corona  very  short,  but  otherwise  like  that  of  P.  aurantia. — Disemma  braclujstephana, 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  56. 

Hab.:  Scrub  on  the  Burdekin,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

There  was  but  a single  expanded  flower  on  the  specimens,  and  in  that  the  petals  do  not 
show,  but  on  examining  a bud  I found  the  structure  precisely  as  in  P.  aurantia.  The  species  will 
require  verifying  on  better  specimens. — Benth. 

I have  never  seen  this  species  growing,  and  the  specimens  of  it  sent  to  me  by  collectors 
differ  in  nowise  from  P.  aurantia. 


2.  MODECCA,  Lam. 

(An  Indian  name.) 

Flowers  unisexual.  Calyx-tube  short,  campanulate  or  elongated.  Petals 
small,  especially  in  the  females.  Stamens  as  many  as  calyx-lobes,  usually  with 
a small  scale  opposite  to  each,  free  or  united  at  the  base,  reduced  in  tbe  females 
to  small  staminodia,  or  wanting.  Ovary  rudimentary  in  the  males,  more  or  less 
stalked  in  the  females,  with  3 parietal  placentas,  stigmas  3,  sessile  or  nearly  so, 
or  on  a 3-fid  style.  Capsule  inflated,  coriaceous  or  thin,  more  or  less  dehiscent 
in  3 valves.  Seeds  with  a small  cup-shaped  aril. — Tall  climbers.  Leaves  entire 
or  palmately  or  pinnately  lobed  or  divided ; stipules  often  inconspicuous. 
Flowers  usually  very  small,  white  or  green,  in  cymes  or  racemes,  on  axillary 
peduncles,  the  rhachis  produced  into  a simple  tendril. 

The  genus  extends  over  tropical  Africa  and  Asia.  Of  the  2 Australian  species,  one  is  endemic, 
although  very  nearly  resembling  one  from  Kasia  ; the  other  is  also  met  with  in  tropical  Asia. 

Fruit  broad  and  very  obtuse  at  the  end 1.  M.  australis. 

Fruit  tapering  towards  each  end ,2.  .M.  populifolia. 

1.  1VE.  australis  (Australian),  R.  Br.  in  DC.  Prod.  iii.  337  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  312.  A climber  extending  greatly  amongst  underwood 
(A.  Cunningham, j , quite  glabrous.  Leaves  on  long  petioles,  broadly  ovate- 
cor.late,  quite  entire,  scarcely  acuminate,  4in.  long  or  more,  membranous,  the 


690 


LVI.  PASSIFLORE^E. 


[Modecca. 

base  of  the  limb  very  shortly  decurrent  on  the  petiole  and  expanded  into  2 rather 
large  often  confluent  glands.  Peduncles  long  and  slender,  terminating  in  a rather 
strong  tendril,  at  the  base  of  which  are  a pair  of  small  opposite  pedunculate 
cymes  of  very  small  flowers,  very  imperfect  in  our  specimens,  but  according  to 
Bauer’s  figure,  given  Joy  Endlicher,  presenting  all  the  character’s  of  the  genus  ; 
the  stigmas  are  on  very  short  distinct  styles.  Capsule  ovoid,  inflated,  about  2in. 
long,  very  smooth,  deep  red  or  crimson.  Seeds  ovate,  flat,  almost  muricate. — 
Endl.  Iconogr.  t.  114,  115. 

Hab.:  Thursday  Island. 

2.  populifolia  (Poplar-shaped  leaves),  Blame,  Bumphia  i.  168,  t.  50. 
A glabrous  climber,  extending  some  distance  over  adjoining  shrubs  and  trees  ; 
stems  striate,  scarcely  sulcate.  Leaves  cordate,  ovate-acute,  membranous,  4 to 
Sin.  long,  2 to  Sin.  broad  near  the  base  ; petiole  about  lin.,  with  2 apical  glands. 
Peduncles  rather  long  and  slender,  terminating,  as  in  M.  australis,  in  a rather 
strong  tendril,  at  the  base  of  which  are  a pair  of  small  opposite  pedunculate 
cymes.  (No  flowers  on  the  specimens  examined.)  Fruit  stipitate,  B^in.  long, 
tapering  to  both  ends,  of  a rich  crimson.  Seeds  lenticular,  3|  lines  diameter, 
dark-brown  and  deeply  pitted. 

Hab.:  Ranges  about  Trinity  Bay,  E.  Cowley,  L.  J.  Nuyent,  and  Mrs.  A.  Taylor. 

Also  indigenous  in  tropical  Asia. 


3.  :|'CARICA,  Linn. 

(From  its  supposed  leaf  resemblance  to  the  common  fig,  Ficus  curica,  Carian.) 

Flowers  unisexual  or  sometimes  hermaphrodite.  Male  flowers  : Calyx  small, 
5-lobed ; corolla  hypocrateriform,  the  tube  slender,  elongated,  lobes  oblong  or 
linear,  valvate  or  contorted  ; stamens  10,  inserted  at  the  throat  of  the  corolla, 
biseriate ; anthers  2-celled ; ovary  rudimentary,  subulate.  Female  flowers : 
Calyx  of  the  males  ; petals  5,  linear-oblong,  erect,  deciduous  ; staminodia  none  ; 
ovary  free,  sessile,  1 or  spuriously  5-celled  ; style  none  or  very  short ; stigmas  5, 
dilated  or  linear,  simple  or  lobed,  ovules  numerous.  Berry  fleshy,  sulcate,  pulpy 
within,  indehiscent.  Seeds  ovoid,  subcompressed  ; testa  coriaceous  or  crusta- 
ceous,  smooth,  rugose,  or  echinate.  Trees  or  shrubs  with  simple  thick  stems  and 
milky  sap.  Leaves  alternate,  subpeltate,  palmate,  digitately  divided  into  7 to  9 
lobes. — Benth.  and  Hook.  Gen.  PI. 

1.  C.  Papaya  (original  name  of  the  fruit),  Linn.  Papaw.  Stems  simple  or  rarely 
branched,  thick,  spongy  inside,  the  leaves  about  the  summit,  on  long  petioles, 
glabrous,  of  about  7 pinnatifid  lobes.  On  the  male  plants  the  flowers  are  borne 
on  long  drooping  panicles,  with  often  a few  hermaphrodite  or  female  flowers  at 
the  end  ; the  flowers  on  the  female  plants  are  usually  sessile  or  nearly  so  in  the 
axils  of  the  leaves. 

Hab.:  This  plant  of  tropical  America  has  become  naturalised  in  many  of  the  scrubs  of  tropical 
Queensland. 


Order  LVII.  CUCURBITACEjE. 

Flowers  usually  unisexual.  Calyx-tube  adherent  to  the  ovary  and  produced 
above  it  into  a campanulate  or  tubular  5-toothed  or  5-lobed  free  portion,  which 
forms  the  whole  calyx  in  the  males.  Petals  5,  free  or  united  in  a lobed  corolla, 
adnate  to  the  free  part  of  the  calyx-tube  and  usually  so  confluent  with  it  as  to 
appear  continuous  with  it  between  its  teeth  or  lobes.  Stamens  3 or  5,  inserted 
on  the  calyx-tube  below  the  petals,  the  filaments  free  or  united  ; anthers  separate 
or  confluent  into  a waved  or  curved  mass.  Ovary  usually  1-celled  when  very 
young,  either  with  3 or  (rarely  4 or  5)  parietal  placentas  soon  thickening  and 


LVII.  CUCURBITACEiE. 


691 


meeting  in  the  axis,  dividing  into  as  many  or  twice  as  many  cells,  or  with  1 
placenta  and  remaining  1-celled.  Style  1,  entire  or  3-lobed,  or  rarely  8 almost 
distinct  styles  ; stigmas  3 (rarely  4 or  5),  entire  or  lobed.  Ovules  1 or  more  to 
each  placenta.  Fruit  succulent  or  coriaceous,  often  with  a hard  rind,  indehiscent 
or  bursting  irregularly  or  rarely  opening  in  3 valves.  Seeds  usually  flat,  often 
obovate  or  oblong,  without  albumen;  testa  coriaceous  or  bony.  Embryo  straight; 
cotyledons  large,  usually  notched  at  the  base,  with  a short  radicle. — Herbs  (except 
in  a few  species  not  Australian)  weak,  prostrate  or  climbing  by  means  of  tendrils 
arising  from  the  sides  of  the  stems  near  the  petioles,  generally  more  or  less 
scabrous  or  hispid.  Leaves  alternate,  without  stipules,  usually  palmately  veined 
and  angular,  lobed  or  divided.  Flowers  unisexual  in  all  the  Australian  genera, 
on  axillary  peduncles,  the  males  usually  in  racemes  or  clusters,  or  sometimes 
solitary,  the  females  generally  solitary. 

A considerable  Order,  dispersed  over  all  but  the  colder  regions  of  the  globe,  but  most 
abundant  in  dry  hot  countries,  especially  in  Africa. 


Tribe  I.  Cucumerinece. — Ovules  horizontal  (or  pendulous).  Female  flowers  usually 
solitary , never  paniculate.  Leaves  not  divided  into  distinct  leaflets. 

Anther-cells  very  flexuose  or  conduplicate. 

Calyx-tube  elongated.  Petals  fringed  with  long  cilia 1.  Trichosanthe. 

Calyx-tube  broadly  campanulate  or  turbinate.  Petals  not  fringed. 

Tendrils  branched. 

Male  flowers  large,  solitary.  Fruit  large  with  a hard  rind,  dry  but  not 

fibrous 2.  Lagenaria. 

Male  flowers  in  pedunculate  racemes.  Fruit  dry,  fibrous 3.  Luffa. 

Male  and  female  flowers  solitary.  Fruit  oblong.  Seeds  smooth,  with 

thickened  margins.  Petioles  eglandulous 4.  Benincasa. 

Tendrils  simple. 

Corolla  with  incurved  scales  at  the  insertion  of  the  stamens.  Anthers 

without  appendage.  Fruit  usually  pulpy,  somewhat  dehiscent  . . 5.  *Momordica. 

Male  flowers  clustered  or  solitary.  Anthers  tipped  with  an  appendage 

to  the  connective.  Fruit  pulpy  or  fleshy 6.  Cucumis. 

Flowers  all  solitary,  connective  not  produced  at  the  apex.  Tendrils  2 to  3-fid  7.  *Citrullus. 

Male  flowers  racemose.  Style  short,  dilated  into  three  2-forked  recurved- 

subulate  stigmatose  branches.  No  tendrils 8.  *Ecballium. 

Corolla  campanulate,  lobed  to  above  or  about  the  middle,  rarely  below  it. 

Tendrils  usually  divided.  Flowers  solitary 9.  *Cucurbita. 

Anther-cells  flexuous.  Style  inserted  in  an  annular  disk 10.  Bryonia. 

Male  flowers  corymbose  or  subumbel  late  or  racemed,  connective  not  pro- 
duced. Fruit  shortly  peduncled 11.  Zehneria. 

Calyx-tube  turbinate.  Anther-cells  straight,  parallel ; connective  of  anther 
minutely  produced  at  apex.  Female  flowers  sessile,  without  staminodia  . 12.  Mukia. 
Calyx-tube  broadly  campanulate.  Anthers  without  appendages.  Female 

flowers  pedunculate,  bearing  staminodia 13.  Melothria. 


Tribe  II.  Sicyoideae. — Stamens  3 to  5 ; filaments  usually  connate.  Ovary  1-celled,  with  1 
pendulous  ovule. 

Tendrils  branched.  Flowers  small.  Fruit  small,  prickly  in  the  Australian 
species 14.  Sicyos. 

Tribe  III.  Zanoniese. — Flowers  small,  females  paniculate  or  in  racemes.  Stamens  5 ; 
filaments  free.  Ovary  hearing  3 placentas.  Fruit  1-celled,  cylindrical  or  3-gonous.  Seeds  winged. 
Calyx  5-lobed.  Stamens  5,  free.  Seeds  winged  at  the  top  end 15.  Alsomitra. 


1.  TRICHOSANTHES,  Linn. 

(The  corolla  fringed  with  hairs.) 

Calyx  in  the  males  and  free  part  of  it  in  the  females  oblong  or  cylindrical, 
dilated  upwards,  5-lobed.  Corolla  rotate,  deeply  divided  into  5 oblong  or  lanceo- 
late lobes,  bordered  by  long  hair-like  lobes  or  cilia.  Stamens  in  the  males  3, 
filaments  very  short,  free ; anthers  2 with  2 cells,  1 with  1 cell,  the  cells  condu- 
plicate. Ovary  in  the  females  oblong  or  globular,  with  3 placentas  ; style 
slender,  with  3 linear  stigmas,  the  gynoecium  reduced  in  the  males  to  3 filiform 


692 


LVII.  CUCURBITACE,®. 


[ Trichnsanthes . 


rudiments.  Fruit  succulent,  often  large,  with  a hard  rind.  Seeds  smooth  or 
with  undulate  or  crenate  margins. — Climbing  annuals  or  perennials.  Tendrils 
2 or  3-branched.  Flowers  white,  large  or  small,  the  males  in  pedunculate 
racemes,  the  females  solitary. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  tropical  Asia  and  America.  Of  the  4 Australian  species,  2 are 
common  Asiatic  ones,  the  other  2 are  endemic,  but  as  yet  insufficiently  known. — Benth. 


Leaves  palmately  or  pedately  divided  into  petiolate  segments 1.  T.  pentaphylla. 

Leaves  palmately  lobed. 

Male  racemes  without  bracts.  Fruits  acuminate 2.  T.  cucurnerina. 

Male  racemes  with  large  broad  leafy  bracts.  Fruits  not  acuminate  ...  3.  T.  pahnata. 
Leaves  ovate-cordate,  not  lobed,  softly  villous.  Male  racemes  with  small 
oblong  or  lanceolate  bracts 4.  T.  Hearnii. 


1.  T.  pentaphylla  (leaflets  5),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  314  ; 
Apparently  a large  climber,  the  specimens  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  palmately  or 
pedately  divided  into  5 ovate  or  ovate-lanceolate  acuminate  entire  segments,  about 
3 to  &in.  long,  all  petiolulate  or  the  lateral  ones  rarely  united  at  the  base. 
Tendrils  3-branched.  Male  flowers  unknown.  Females  solitary,  shortly 
pedicellate.  Calyx-tube  cylindrical,  rather  thick,  broad  and  obtuse  at  the  base, 
produced  far  above  the  ovary,  rather  more  than  lin.  long;  lobes  broadly  lanceo- 
late, acuminate,  3 to  4 lines  long,  entire  or  with  1 or  2 teeth.  Corolla-lobes 
fringed.  Fruit  as  round  as  a ball,  beautifully  red,  the  flesh  deep  yellow,  the  pulp 
dark  green  ( Dallachy ).  Seeds  compressed,  thick,  oblong,  the  margin  entire. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River  ; Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller  ; Rockingham  Bay.  Dallachy. 

The  specimens  do  not  admit  of  the  further  examination  of  the  flowers,  of  which  there  is  only 
one  ready  to  open.  The  foliage  is  that  of  a Telfairia,  to  which  it  may  possibly  have  to  be  trans- 
ferred notwithstanding  the  narrower  seeds,  unless  the  two  genera  be  combined  into  one. — Benth. 

2.  T.  cucurnerina  (fruit  like  a Cucumber),  Linn.  Spec.  PI.  1432 ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  314.  Stems  slender,  although  sometimes  extending  to  a great  length. 
Leaves  nearly  orbicular  or  reniform  in  their  outline,  broadly  cordate  at  the  base, 
mostly  3 to  4in.  diameter,  palmately  3 to  7-lobed,  the  lobes  broad,  rarely  reaching 
to  the  middle  and  irregularly  toothed,  more  or  less  scabrous- pubescent.  Tendrils 
3-branched.  Male  flowers  in  a short  raceme  at  the  end  of  a long  slender  peduncle, 
without  bracts.  Calyx-tube  in  the  young  bud  short,  broad  and  rounded  at  the 
base ; teeth  very  short  and  recurved.  Corolla-lobes  narrow-oblong,  4in.  long, 
besides  the  fringe  of  long  cilia.  Female  flowers  shortly  pedicellate.  Calyx-tube 
attenuate  above  the  ovary  into  a long  slender  neck.  Fruit  ovoid-conical, 
acuminate,  not  exceeding  2in.,  orange-red  or  yellow  when  ripe.  Seeds  about  8 or 
10,  thick  but  flattened,  with  the  margin  more  or  less  crenate. — Naud.  in  Ann.  Sc. 
Nat.  ser.  4 xviii.  191. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  by  F.  v.  Mueller , but  without  locality. 

Common  in  hedges,  <tc.,  in  East  India. 

3.  T.  palmata  (leaves  palmate),  Roxb.  FI.  Inil.  iii.  704  ; Benth.  VI,  Austr. 
iii.  315.  A coarse  climber.  Leaves  broad,  palmately  3 to  7-lobed,  the  lobes 
sometimes  broad  and  short,  more  frequently  especially  the  central  one  reaching 
to  below  the  middle  and  more  or  less  sinuate-toothed  or  lobed,  pubescent.  Male 
racemes  on  long  stout  peduncles,  at  first  short  and  head-like,  at  length  elongated, 
with  a broadly  cuneate  or  orbicular  toothed  or  jagged  bract  at  least  lin.  diameter 
under  each  pedicel.  Pedicels  very  short.  Calyx-tube  above  lin.  long,  attenuate 
below  the  middle ; lobes  ovate  or  lanceolate,  acuminate,  3 to  4 lines  long.  Petals 
obovate,  fringed  with  very  long  cilia.  Female  flowers  shortly  pedicellate.  Calyx- 
tube  abruptly  contracted  above  the  ovary.  Fruit  nearly  globular,  not  acuminate, 
2 to  3in.  diameter. — Wight  and  Arn.  Prod.  350,  with  the  synonyms  adduced  ; 
Wight,  Illustr.  t.  104,  105  ; T.  subvelutina,  F.  v.  M.  (Alfred  Cogniaux). 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River.  IF.  Hill ; Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy  (with  larger  less-lobed  leaves). 

The  species  is  common  in  forests  in  India,  where  it  climbs  to  the  tops  of  the  loftiest 
trees. — Roxburgh- 


Trichosanthes.] 


LVII.  CUCURBIT  ACEiE. 


693 


4.  T.  Hearnii  (After  Dr.  W.  E.  Hearn),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.\  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  315.  Of  this  there  are  two  male  fragments  in  F.  v.  Mueller’s  collection 
under  the  name  of  T.  Hearnii.  Leaves  broadly  cordate-ovate,  denticulate  and 
sometimes  obscurely  sinuate-lobed,  like  those  of  T.  dioica,  Roxb.  (now  united  to 
T.  nervifolia ) and  T.  cordata,  but,  instead  of  being  scabrous-pubescent  only,  they 
are  densely  and  softly  villous  underneath.  Male  racemes  on  long  peduncles. 
Bracts  persistent,  oblong  or  lanceolate,  entire  or  toothed,  but  only  2 or  3 lines 
long.  Calyx-tube  slender,  attenuate  at  the  base,  above  Ain.  long  ; lobes  narrow, 
acute.  Petals  broadly  oblong,  densely  fringed  with  long  cilia. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy  (Herb.  F.  v.  Mueller). 

A male  specimen  in  Herb.  R.  Br.,  from  the  islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  in  bud  only, 
may  belong  to  the  same  species,  but  some  of  the  leaves  are  deeply  divided  into  2 to  5 lobes. — 
Benth. 


2.  LAGENARIA,  Ser. 

(From  lagena,  a flask.) 

Calyx  in  the  males,  and  free  part  of  it  in  the  females,  campanulate  or  tubular, 
with  5 teeth  or  lobes.  Corolla  campanulate,  deeply  5-lobed.  Stamens  in  the 
males  3,  shorter  than  the  calyx-tube  ; filaments  free  ; anthers  2 with  2 cells,  1 
with  1 cell,  the  cells  linear,  flexuose,  bordering  the  connective.  Ovary  in  the 
females  from  obovoid  to  cylindrical,  with  3 placentas,  and  numerous  horizontal 
ovules  ; style  short,  thick,  with  3 bifid  stigmas.  Fruit  large,  indehiscent,  with  a 
hard  rind  and  fungous  flesh.  Seeds  variously  shaped. — Large  climber.  Tendrils 
2-branched.  Flowers  white,  both  males  and  females  solitary. 

The  genus  consists  only  of  a single  species. 

1.  la.  vulgaris  (common),  Ser.  in  DC.  Prod.  iii.  299  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  316.  A coarse  climber,  often  emitting  a musky  odour,  more  or 
less  pubescent  or  villous.  Leaves  rather  large,  broadly  orbicular-cordate,  angular 
and  denticulate  or  obscurely  or  shortly  lobed.  Tendrils  usually  2-branched. 
Male  flowers  rather  large,  white,  on  peduncles  of  2 to  4in.  • Calyx-tube  turbinate, 
about  Jin.  long;  lobes  or  teeth  linear,  shorter  than  the  tube.  Corolla  expanding 
to  2 or  3in.  diameter.  Female  flowers  rather  smaller,  on  shorter  peduncles. 
Fruit  very  variable  in  shape  and  size. 

Hab.:  From  Broadsound  to  Port  Denison,  Thozet. 

The  species  appears  to  be  indigenous  in  Asia  and  Africa,  but  is  much  cultivated  and  establishes 
itself  in  many  tropical  and  subtropical  countries.  It  includes  the  Bottle  and  many  other 
Gourds. — Benth. 


3.  LUFFA,  Cav. 

(From  the  Egyptian  or  Arabian  name  of  one  species,  often  spelt  “ Loofah.”) 

Calyx  in  the  males,  and  free  part  of  it  above  a narrow  tube  in  the  females, 
campanulate  or  turbinate,  with  5 teeth.  Corolla  rotate,  deeply  divided  into  5 
oblong-obovate  or  obcordate  lobes.  Stamens  in  the  males  3 or  rarely  5 ; 
filaments  free,  or  2 connate  and  the  third  free ; anthers  protruding  from  the 
calyx-tube,  two  with  2 cells,  one  with  1 cell,  the  cells  flexuose,  the  connective 
without  any  appendage.  Ovary  in  the  females  elongated,  with  3 placentas  and 
many  horizontal  ovules  ; style  columnar,  the  stigma  divided  into  3 bifid  lobes  ; 
rudimentary  gyncecium  in  the  males  a small  gland.  Fruit  dry,  oblong  or 
cylindrical  terete  or  ribbed,  fibrous  inside,  the  small  hard  conical  end  (or  base  of 
the  style)  circumsciss  and  deciduous.  Seeds  oblong,  compressed. — Prostrate  or 
climbing  annuals,  often  large.  Leaves  palmately  3 or  7-lobed.  Tendrils 
branched.  Flowers  rather  large,  yellow  or  white,  the  males  in  pedunculate 
racemes,  the  females  solitary.  Fruits  usually  rather  large. 

The  genus  comprises  a few  Asiatic  and  a greater  number  of  African  species. 


694 


LVII.  CUCURBITACEiE. 


[hujfa. 


1.  X..  aegyptiaca  (Egyptian),  Mill.  Diet.;  Ser.  in  DC.  Prod.  iii.  303  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  316.  Towel  Gourd.  A large  climber.  Leaves  large,  broad,  the 
lower  ones  5-angled,  the  upper  ones  more  or  less  deeply  5-lobed,  the  lobes,  at 
least  the  central  one,  usually  acute,  often  above  6in.  diameter,  more  or  less 
scabrous.  Tendrils  3-branched.  Male  racemes  elongated,  on  long  peduncles, 
without  bracts.  Pedicels  short.  Calyx  broadly  turbinate,  about  £in.  diameter. 
Corolla  more  than  lin.  diameter.  Fruit  oblong,  from  2 or  3 to  8 or  lOin.  long, 
smooth,  with  10  deeper  coloured  streaks  when  fresh,  which  in  the  dry  state  are 
often  slightly  raised  ribs,  but  not  acutely  prominent  as  in  L.  acutangula. — 
L.  pentandra,  Roxb.  FI.  Ind.  iii.  712;  Wight,  Ic.  t.  499;  L.  ci/lindriea,  Room.; 
Naud.  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  4 xii.  119,  with  the  long  list  of  synonyms  adduced; 
L.  leiocarpa,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iii.  107. 

Hab.  Gilbert  and  Burdekin  rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Fitzroy  River,  Thozet ; Edgecombe  Bay, 
Dallachy. 

The  species  is  widely  spread  over  tropical  and  subtropical  Africa  and  Asia.  Naudin  distin- 
guishes the  Australian  plant  as  a variety,  which  F.  v.  Mueller  raises  to  a species  on  account  of 
the  fruit  said  to  be  not  larger  than  a fowl’s  egg  without  longitudinal  lines.  But  in  the  specimens 
sent  hy  F.  v.  Mueller  from  the  Gilbert  River  the  fruits  are  quite  as  large  and  the  slightly  raised 
lines  quite  as  conspicuous  as  in  several  of  the  Indian  ones  .—  Benth. 

Var.  peramara , Bail.  Plant  of  climbing  habit,  rambling  over  shrubs  and  small  trees  to  the 
height  of  about  20ft.  Stems  5-angular,  smooth,  the  young  growth  hoary  or  silvery.  Leaves  4 
to  Sin.  diameter,  more  or  less  deeply  5-lobed,  the  lobes  more  or  less  toothed  or  lobed,  the  central 
lobe  often  much  longer  than  the  others  and  always  acute,  the  lower  lobes  often  rounded, 
scabrous,  especially  on  the  upper  surface  ; petioles  angular,  nearly  of  equal  length  with  the 
lamina.  Tendrils  2 or  3-branched  or  at  times  simple.  Male  flowers  in  short  racemes  on  long 
peduncles,  with  a sessile,  glabrous,  thick,  prominently  tubercled,  cordate  bract  at  the  base,  and 
similar  bracteoles  under  each  flower.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  10-nerved  ; lobes  longer  than  the 
tube,  acuminate,  3 or  4 lines  long.  Corolla  about  2in.  diameter,  yellow,  divided  into  5 obovate 
deeply  divided  lobes  or  petals,  much  bearded  at  the  base.  Stamens  5,  in  some  flowers  all  free, 
in  others  2 connate  pairs  and  the  other  free.  Female  flowers  solitary,  pedunculate,  in  the  same 
axils  as  the  male,  without  bract  or  bracteole  ; calyx-lobes  tuberculate  like  the  bracts,  corolla  as 
in  the  males.  Fruit  ovate-oblong,  about  3in.  long,  10-nerved,  smooth,  grayish  or  light-brown, 
internal  fibres  black  and  very  bitter.  Seeds  oval,  very  dark  brown  with  irregular  jet-black  spots, 
otherwise  smooth,  4 lines  long  excluding  the  narrow  wing  by  which  it  is  surrounded.  Hab.: 
Mulgrave  River,  Bellenden  Ker  Exped.  1889. — Dr.  Thos.  L.  Bancroft  says  of  the  fruit  of  this 
plant:  “Upon  tasting  it  there  is  experienced  an  intensely  bitter  sensation,  which  in  a few 
minutes  disappears  but  leaves  a distressing  acridity  in  the  throat,  which  is  not  at  its  worst  until 
several  hours  afterwards.  An  extract  is  very  poisonous  and  contains  two  principles,  a bitter 
substance  and  a saponin. ” Paper  to  Linn.  Soc.  of  N.S.W.,  Nov.,  1889. — In.  Fragm.  iii.  107 
Barron  Mueller  describes  this  Luffa  under  Naudin’s  name  of  L.  leiocarpa,  but  in  his  later  works 
follows  the  FI.  Austr.  and  places  it  as  L.  eegyptiaca,  of  which  I consider  the  Australian  plant  had 
better  be  known  as  a distinct  form,  as  above  given. 


4.  BENINCASA,  Savi. 

(After  Count  Benincasa.) 

Monoecious.  Flowers  all  solitary.  Male  : Calyx-tube  campanulate  ; lobes  5, 
leafy,  serrate.  Corolla  rotate,  5-partite  ; lobes  obovate.  Filaments  free,  inserted 
at  the  mouth  of  the  calyx,  short,  flat,  thick ; anthers  exserted,  one  1-celled,  two 
2-celled  ; cells  very  flexuous,  bordering  the  thick  connective.  Rudiment  of  ovary 
a glandule.  Female  flower  : Staminodes  3.  Ovary  ovoid  ; style  stout,  inserted  in 
a disk  ; stigmas  3,  wavy  ; ovules  very  numerous  on  3 placentas.  Fruit  an  ovoid 
or  cylindric,  thick,  terete,  soft,  glaucous,  hispid  berry.  Seeds  numerous,  ovoid- 
oblong,  flat,  margins  thickened.  Hairy  annuals.  Leaves  orbicular-reniform, 
palmately  5-lobed ; petiole  eglandular.  Tendrils  2 to  3-fid.  Flowers  large, 
yellow.  Fruit  large,  waxy  externally.- — Hooker  in  Oliver’s  FI.  Trop.  Africa  ii.  532. 
The  description  referring  particularly  to  the  then  known  species,  B.  cerifera,  Savi. 

1.  B.  vacua  (fruit  hollow),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  vi.  186,  under  Cucurbita.  A 
climbing  or  creeping  plant  with  angular  stems.  The  young  parts  more  or  less 
covered  with  septate  hairs.  Leaves  cordate,  5 or  3-lobed,  2 to  Sin.  long  and 
broad,  denticulate  ; on  petioles  of  about  the  same  length,  not  glandulous  at  the 


Bmincnm.] 


LVII.  CUCURBITACEiE. 


095 


apex.  Tendrils  2-branched.  Peduncles  solitary,  1-flowered,  1 to  Sin.  long. 
Calyx-lobes  about  4 lines  long,  linear-lanceolate.  Corolla  yellow,  the  lower 
portion  for  about  lin.  tubular.  Stamens  3 ; filaments  glabrous  connate  below. 
Anthers  free,  lobes  twisted,  connective  dilated.  Staminodia  3,  in  the  female 
flowers  orbicular-ovate,  plane,  14  line  long,  glabrous.  Style  cylindric  glabrous, 
14-  line  long.  Stigma  3-lobed.  Fruit  large  as  an  orange,  yellowish  green,  at 
first  pilose,  the  pith  whitish  and  slightly  bitter.  Seeds  dark,  ovate,  attenuated  at 
the  base,  about  4 lines  long. 

Hab.:  Many  localities  in  the  tropics. 

Cogniaux  l.c.  places  this  and  B.  cerifera  as  forms  only  of  B.  idspida,  the  Cuciirbita  lrispida, 
Thunb. 


5.  MOMORDICA,  Linn. 

(Named  from  the  bitten  appearance  of  the  edge  of  the  seed.) 

Calyx  in  the  males  and  free  part  of 'it  in  the  females  short,  campanulate,  with 
5 lobes.  Corolla  rotate  or  broadly  campanulate,  usually  divided  to  the  calyx  into 
5 lobes.  Stamens  in  the  males  2 or  3 ; filaments  short,  free  ; anthers  at  first 
coherent,  at  length  free,  one  or  two  2-celled,  the  others  4-celled,  the  Gells  flexuose, 
the  connective  without  any  appendage.  Two  (or  three  ?)  eonnivent  scales  on  the 
tube  of  the  calyx  and  corolla  at  the  insertion  of  the  stamens.  Ovary  in  the 
females  fusiform  or  oblong,  with  3 placentas  and  several  horizontal  ovules  ; style 
slender,  with  3 stigmas.  Fruit  oblong,  fusiform  or  cylindric,  not  fibrous,  inde- 
hiscent  or  opening  more  or  less  in  3 valves.  Seeds  imbedded  in  pulp,  flattened 
or  convex,  smooth  or  variously  sculptured. — Climbers,  usually  slender.  Leaves 
entire,  lobed  or  3 to  7-foliolate.  Tendrils  simple.  Peduncles  axillary,  either  all 
1-flowered,  with  a broad  bract  under  the  flower,  or  the  males  paniculate. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  the  tropical  and  subtropical  regions  of  both  the  New  and  the  Old 
World;  most  of  the  species,  however,  are  African.  The  two  following  ones  are  common  in  Asia 
and  Africa. 

Leaves  simple,  entire,  lobed  or  angled.  Stamens  3.  Male  flowers  solitary, 
bracteate.  Bracts  conspicuous. 

Bracts  near  apex  of  peduncle.  Calyx-lobes  acuminate 1.  M.  BaUamina. 

Bracts  below  or  near  middle  of  peduncle 2.  .1/.  Charantia. 

1.  IVI.  Balsamina  (balsam-bearing),  [jinn.:  Ser.  in  DC.  Prod.  iii.  311  ; 
Benth.  b'l.  Austr.  iii.  318.  A monoecious  slender  annual  climber.  Leaves  thin 
and  glabrous,  orbicular  in  their  circumscription,  mostly  under  2in.  diameter, 
palmately  and  deeply  5 -lobed,  the  lobes  more  or  less  rhomboidal,  deeply  and 
acutely  toothed  or  lobed.  Peduncles  all  slender  and  1-flowered,  the  males  usually 
longer  than  the  leaf,  with  a reniform  or  broadly  cordate  bract  a little  below  the 
flower,  the  females  shorter,  with  the  bract  below  the  middle.  Calyx  fully  £in. 
diameter,  with  very  thin  broad  acute  lobes  longer  than  the  tube.  Corolla  yellow, 
nearly  twice  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Female  flowers  rather  smaller.  Ovary 
fusiform,  attenuate  under  the  free  part  of  the  calyx.  Fruit  ovoid-globular,  more 
or  less  attenuate  at  the  end,  about  lin.  diameter,  bursting  irregularly.  Seeds  5 
or  6,  rather  large,  each  one  enveloped  in  a red  pulp. 

Hab.:  Widely  spread  over  Asia  and  Africa,  and  now  introduced  into  America.  Naturalised  in 
Queensland. 

2.  1VI.  Charantia  (Charantia),  Linn,  in  Oliver  Trap.  PI.  Afri.  ii. 
537.  Monoecious;  glabrous  or  pubescent- pilose.  Stem  very  slender.  Leaves 
1 to  4in.  in  diameter,  membranous,  reniform-orbicular,  pedately  5 to  7-lobed  to 
near  the  base,  basal  sinus  broad,  lobes  oblong-lanceolate  or  rhomboid,  often  much 
contracted  at  the  base,  obtusely  sinuate  or  lobulate.  Tendrils  simple.  Male 
peduncle  1 to  5in.  long,  very  slender.  Bract  about  the  middle  reniform  or 
orbicular-cordate,  green,  quite  entire.  Calyx-lobes  ovate,  acute.  Corolla  irregu- 
lar, 4-  to  14-in.  in  diameter,  yellow.  Anthers  flexuose,  connective  narrow. 


Part  II.  BI5 


096 


LVII.  CUCURBIT  ACEjE. 


[WinWord  ica. 


Female  peduncle  slender,  1 to  Bin.  long,  bracteate  towards  the  base.  Ovary 
fusiform,  rostrate,  nmricate,  8 to  Gin.  long,  rostrate,  with  tuberculate  ridges,  the 
tubercles  triangular.  Seeds  few,  like  those  of  M.  Balsam  hm,  but  more  sculptured. 
— Wight,  Ic.  t.  504. 

Hab.:  India  and  Africa.  Naturalised  in  Queensland. 


0.  CUCUMIS,  Linn. 

(Derivation  obscure.) 

Calyx  in  the  males,  and  free  part  of  it  in  the  females  turbinate  or  campanulate, 
with  5 teeth  or  lobes.  Corolla  campanulate,  deeply  5-lobed  or  divided  to  the 
calyx.  Stamens  8 ; filaments  short,  free  ; anthers  two  with  2 cells,  one  with  1 
cell ; cells  linear,  fiexuose,  connective  produced  into  a crest-like  appendage  beyond 
the  cells.  Ovary  in  the  female  with  8 (rarely  5)  placentas  and  numerous  horizontal 
ovules;  style  short,  with  8 (rarely  5)  obtuse  stigmas.  Fruit  .variously  shaped, 
fleshy  with  a hard  rind,  indehiscent  or  rarely  tardily  opening  in  3 valves.  Seeds 
oblong,  compressed,  the  margin  not  thickened. — Climbers  either  annual  or  with  a 
perennial  rhizome,  more  or  less  hispid.  Tendrils  simple.  Flowers  yellow,  the 
males  in  axillary  clusters  or  rarely  solitary,  the  females  solitary,  usually  sessile  or 
shortly  pedicellate. 

The  genus  extends  over  the  tropical  and  subtropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World. 
The  only  Australian  species  is  a common  one  in  Asia. 

1.  C.  trigonus  (somewhat  triangular  fruit),  Roxb.  FI.  Iiul.  iii.  722  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  317.  A rather  slender  creeper  or  climber,  sometimes  rigidly 
hispid,  almost  aculeolate,  sometimes  scabrous-pubescent.  Leaves  not  large, 
usually  broadly  ovate-cordate  in  their  outline,  either  nearly  entire  or  more  or  less 
3,  5,  or  7-lobed,  the  lobes  slightly  or  sometimes  more  deeply  toothed,  usually 
scabrous.  Flowers  small,  on  short  slender  pedicels.  Calyx  in  the  males  from  a 
little  more  than  1 line  to  nearly  2 lines  long,  pubescent-hirsute  or  densely  woolly  ; 
lobes  short  and  narrow.  Corolla  about  Un.  diameter,  the  lobes  acute.  Female 
flowers  usually  rather  larger,  the  adnate  tube  ovoid  or  oblong,  3 to  4 lines  long, 
tomentose-pubescent  or  densely  woolly.  Fruit  globular  or  ovoid,  often  quite 
glabrous,  but  sometimes  retaining  a few  scattered  hairs,  from  under  lin.  diameter 
to  more  than  twice  that  size. — Wight,  Ic.  t.  497 ; Naud.  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  4 
xi.  30;  C.  pubescem,  Hook,  in  Mitch.  Trop.  Austr.  110;  C.jucundus  and  C.  picro- 
carpus,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Phil.  Inst.  Viet.  iii.  46. 

Hab.:  Suttov  and  Bogan  Rivers,  Bowman:  Fort  Cooper,  Thozet;  Balonne  River,  Mitchell: 
Darling  River  to  Cooper’s  Creek  ; and  many  other  localities. 

The  only  absolute  difference  to  be  gathered  from  Naudin’s  investigations  between  C.  trigonus, 
and  what  he  concludes  to  be  the  wild  Melon  (C.  Melo,  var.  agrestis,  Naud.  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser. 
4 xi.  73;  C.  pubescens,  of  Indian  botanists,  Wight,  Ic.  t.  496,  and  probably  of  Willd.) , is,  that 
the  former  has  a perennial  root,  or  rather  rhizome,  and  roots  very  readily  at  the  joints,  whilst 
the  Melon  is  strictly  annual.  As,  however,  the  stems  are  always  annual,  the  existence  of  the 
perennial  rhizome  is  rarely  ascertained  except  in  cultivation,  and  no  collector  of  Australian 
specimens  alludes  to  it.  Some  of  these  look  very  much  like  Indian  specimens  of  the  wild  Melon, 
others  have  more  the  appearance  of  the  Indian  C.  trigona , and  some  are  not  to  be  distinguished 
from  the  New  Caledonian  C.  Pancherianus,  Naud.  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  4 xii.  112  t.  8.  Most 
probably  all  are  forms  only  of  C.  Melo. — Bentli. 

Until  our  plants  are  more  fully  studied  under  cultivation,  it  is  better  to  leave  them  with  the 
above  note  from  Benth.  in  FI.  Austr. 


7.  *CITRULLUS,  Schrad. 

(Supposed  Orange-like  fruit.) 

Flowers  all  solitary,  monoecious.  Male  flowers : Calyx-tube  campanulate, 
5-lobed  ; corolla  campanulate,  5-lobed  to  below  the  middle,  lobes  obtuse  ; fila- 
ments 3,  very  short,  free,  inserted  within  the  tube  ; anthers  slightly  cohering, 


( ~'itrvlhtx .] 


LVIT.  CUCITRBITACEiE. 


697 


one  1 -celled,  two  2-celled,  cells  lineal1,  flexuous,  bordering  the  broad  connective 
which  is  not  produced  beyond  the  cells  ; rudiment  of  ovary  gland-like.  Female 
flowers  : Staminodes  ligulate  or  setaceous  ; ovary  ovoid  or  globose  ; style  short, 
stigma  3-lobed  ; ovules  numerous  on  3 placentas  ; fruit  globose,  usually  hard, 
smooth  ; seeds  many,  oblong,  compressed,  smooth. — Annuals,  rarely  perennials, 
herbs.  Foetid  or  musky,  rarely  scandent.  Leaves  deeply  lobed  ; lobes  narrow. 
Tendrils  usually  2 or  3-fid.  Flowers  shortly  peduncled,  yellow.  Fruit  large. 

1.  C.  vulgaris  (common),  Schrait.  Water  or  Pie-melon.  Annual.  Stem 
glabrous  or  woolly.  Leaves  triangular-ovate  in  outline,  3 to  7-lobed,  glabrous  or 
slightly  hairy.  Petals  obovate,  about  3 lines  long,  light  yellow.  Fruit  variable 
in  size  and  form. 

Hab.:  Cultivated  in  most  warm  countries;  met  with  as  a stray  from  cultivation  in  many 
parts  of  Queensland. 


8.  -ECBALLIUM,  A.  Rich. 

(From  ekbalUin , to  cast  out ; seed  ejected  from  the  fruit.) 

Flowers  monoecious.  Male  racemose.  Calyx-tube  short,  campanulate,  the 
limb  5 -fid.  Corolla  subrotund  or  broadly  campanulate,  deeply  5 -lobed,  with 
oblong  acute  segments.  Stamens  3 ; filaments  short,  free ; anthers  broad,  one 
1 -celled,  the  others  2-celled,  the  cells  flexuose,  connective  marginal.  Female 
flowers  solitary,  pedunculate.  Calyx  above  the  ovary  and  corolla  of  the  males. 
Stamens  3,  imperfect.  Ovary  oblong,  hispid,  placentas  3 ; style  short,  dilated  in 
three  2-furcate  and  recurved-subulate  stigmatose  branches.  Fruit  oblong,  hispid- 
echinate,  very  juicy,  when  mature  separating  from  top  of  articulate  peduncle  and 
elastically  projecting  seeds  with  juice  from  basal  aperture.  Seeds  numerous, 
oblong,  compressed,  short  or  narrowly  marginate,  crowned  at  apex  with  short 
duplex  aril  of  hilum  and  micropyle. 

1.  E.  Elaterium  (purging),  A.  Rich.  The  Squirting  Cucumber.  A 
perennial  or  annual  herb,  creeping,  fleshy,  everywhere  hispid-pilose.  Leaves 
alternate,  long-petiolate,  cordate,  obtuse,  without  tendrils.  Flowers  yellow, 
lateral,  the  female  sometimes  in  the  same  axil  with  the  male  raceme,  but  usually 
in  separate  ones. — Bent,  and  Trim.  Med.  PI.  pi.  115. 

Hab.:  A Mediterranean  plant,  has  become  naturalised  along  the  banks  of  the  Condamine,  E. 
M.  Shelton. 


9.  -CUCURBITA,  Linn. 

(Derived  from  Cucumis.) 

Monoecious.  Flowers  all  solitary.  Male  : Calyx-tube  campanulate,  lobes 
simple  or  foliaceous.  Corolla  campanulate,  5-lobed  to  or  below  the  middle  ; 
lobes  recurved  at_the  apex.  Filaments  3,  free,  inserted  at  the  base  of  the  calyx  ; 
anthers  , connate,  one  1-celled,  two  2-celled,  cells  elongate,  conduplicate. 
Rudiment  of  ovary  none.  Female  flower:  Staminodes  3.  Ovary  oblong;  style 
short,  stigmas  3,  2-lobed  ; ovules  numerous,  on  3 placentas.  Fruit  fleshy,  seeds 
many,  ovate  or  oblong,  flattened,  margined  or  not. — Annuals  or  perennial-rooted 
tropical  herbs  ; branches  usually  prostrate  and  rooting.  Leaves  lobed,  cordate  at 
the  base.  Tendrils  2 to  multifid.  Flowers  large  yellow. — Hooker  in  Oliver  FI. 
Trop.  Africa  ii.  555. 

1.  C.  Pepo  (Greek  name  for  gourd  or  melon),  DC.  Annual.  Stem  creep- 
ing, rarely  erect,  angular  and  grooved.  Leaves  5-lobed,  with  a deep  basal  sinus, 
lobes  acute,  often  lobulate ; petioles  and  nerves  beneath  prickly.  Peduncles 
obtusely  5-angled,  Calyx  of  male  flower  campanulate,  constricted  beneath  the 


0 98 


LVTT.  CUCURBIT  ACE  J3. 


[Cnrurhita . 


corolla,  teeth  subulate.  Fruiting  peduncle  often  woody,  angled  and  deeply 
grooved.  Fruit  with  fibrous  flesh.  Seeds  white. — Bent,  and  '[’rim.  Med.  PI. 
pi.  116. 

Hab.:  The  Fumpkin  of  cultivation,  often  met  with  as  a stray. 


10.  BRYONIA,  Linn. 

(From  the  Greek,  alluding  to  the  rapid  growth  of  the  plants.) 

(Bryonopsis,  Blume.) 

Calyx  in  the  males,  and  free  part  of  it  in  the  females,  broadly  campanulate, 
5-toothed.  Corolla  campanulate,  deeply  5-lobed.  Stamens  in  the  males  3 ; 
filaments  free  ; anthers  two  with  2 cells,  one  with  1 cell,  the  cells  flexuose. 
Ovary  in  the  females  fusiform,  ovoid  or  globular,  contracted  at  the  top,  with  3 
placentas  and  few  horizontal  ovules;  style  slender,  with  3 reniform  or  bifid 
stigmas.  Fruit  a globular  or  ovoid-conical  berry.  Seeds  few.  compressed,  or 
with  convex  faces  and  a thickened  margin  enveloped  in  pulp. — Climbing  herbs 
with  simple  or  2-branched  tendrils.  Leaves  palmately  lobed.  Flowers  greenish- 
yellow,  small  as  well  as  the  fruits,  in  axillary  racemes  sometimes  adduced  to 
clusters. 

The  genus,  taken  in  the  above  extended  sense  given  to  it  by  most  botanists,  although  not 
numerous  in  species,  ranges  over  the  warmer  and  temperate  regions  both  of  the  New  and  the 
Old  World.  The  Australian  species,  however,  belongs  to  the  section  Rryonopsis,  now  aodpted 
by  Naudin  as  a distinct  genus,  limited  to  2 or  perhaps  3 Asiatic  and  African  species,  of  which 
the  Australian  is  one. — Benth. 


1.  B.  laciniosa  (leaves  much  divided),  Linn.:  Sir.  in  DC.  Prod.  iii.  308  ; 
Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  319.  Stems  rather  slender  but  extending  to  a great  length. 
Leaves  broad,  very  deeply  palmatifid  or  almost  pedatifid,  the  lobes  ovate,  ovate- 
lanceolate,  or  sometimes  linear-lanceolate,  often  3 to  -fin.  long,  and  more  or  less 
angular  or  sinuate-toothed.  Tendrils  usually  2-branched,  but  one  branch  some- 
times small  or  quite  wanting.  Flowers  small,  in  very  short  axillary  racemes 
usually  reduced  to  clusters,  the  males  and  females  often  in  the  same  axil,  the 
rhachis  rarely  3 to  4 lines  long.  Pedicels  slender,  from  1 to  5 or  6 lines  long. 
Calyx  14  to  2 lines  diameter.  Corolla  scarcely  twice  the  size  of  the  calyx. 
Berry  globular,  yellow  or  red,  ab.iut  lin.  diameter.  Seeds  with  a very  thick 
transversely-furrowed  border,  the  faces  convex  or  conical  within  the  border. — 
Wight,  l.c.  t.  509  ; Naud.  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  4 xii.  139,  with  the  synonyms 
adduced  ; Zehnerin  erythrocarpa,  F.  v.  M.  in  Hook.  Kew  .Tourn.  viii.  51  (from  the 
character  given). 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  R.  Brown ; N.E.  coast,  A.  Cunningham;  Burdekin  River,  I‘\  v.  Mueller  ; 
Suttor  River,  Bowman  : Rockhampton,  Thozet,  Dallachy ; Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay, 
F.  v.  Mueller. 

The  species  is  dispersed  over  tropical  Asia  and  Africa.  Naudin.  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  4 xii.  140, 
and  xviii.  193,  distinguishes  this  species,  with  1 or  2 closely  allied  ones  (or  perhaps  varieties)  as 
the  above-mentioned  genus  Bryonopsi*.  This  name  was  originally  proposed  by  Blume  for  several 
old  Bryonia s now  referred  to  Zehnerin  and  other  groups,  and  is  now  limited  by  Naudin  to  B. 
laciniosa  and  its  allies,  characterised  especially  by  the  seed,  but  also  by  monoecious  not  dioecious 
flowers,  the  clustered  not  racemose  inflorescence,  and  branched  not  simple  tendrils.  But  one  of 
our  European  true  Bryonias  is  monoecious,  the  clusters  of  B.  laciniosa  are  nothing  but  short 
racemes,  and  the  branched  tendrils,  although  general,  are  not  constant,  and  the  genus  rests 
solely  on  the  seed,  which  appears  to  me  to  be  a much  better  secfional  than  generic  character. — 
Bentli. 


11.  ZEHNERIA,  Endl. 

(After  Joseph  Zehner.) 

Flowers  usually  dioecious,  all  fascicled  racemose  or  cymose.  Male  flowers  : 
Calyx  tubular  or  campanulate,  5-toothed  or  lobed.  Corolla  rotate,  5-partite, 
villous  within,  Filaments  3,  rarely  4 or  5,  inserted  in  the  tube  or  base  of  the 


Zehneria .] 


LVII.  CUCURBITACEiE. 


699 


calyx,  stout  or  slender,  often  villous  ; anthers  orbicular,  one  1 -celled,  two2-celled, 
or  all  1-celled,  hairy  at  the  back  and  sides,  cells  curved,  connective  not  produced. 
Rudiment  of  ovary  8-lobed.  Female  flowers  : Staminodes  8,  linear.  Ovary 
ovoid  or  subglobose  ; style  inserted  on  a thick  annular  disk  ; stigma  8-lobed  or 
stigmas  3,  ovules  numerous,  on  3 placentas.  Berry  generally  globose.  Seeds 
few  or  many,  obovate,  flattened  or  tumid,  usually  smooth  and  margined,  rarely 
tuberculate. — Slender,  glabrous,  scabrid  or  tomentose,  scandent  or  prostrate, 
tropical  perennial-rooted  herbs.  Leaves  angled  or  toothed,  often  membranous. 
Tendrils  simple.  Flowers  small,  white  or  yellow.  Fruit  shortly  peduncled, 
small.  The  stems  and  branches,  which  are  invariably  angled  and  grooved  when 
dry,  are  possibly  terete  when  fresh. — Hook,  in  Oliver  FI.  Trop.  Afr.  ii.  558. 

1.  Z.  ejecta  (casting  out  its  seed),  Bail.  Queensland  Squirting  Cucumber. 
A glandular-hairy  climber,  covering  shrubs  to  the  height  of  6 or  more  feet. 
Leaves  2in.  long  and  more  broad,  membranous,  the  upper  portion  sharply 
3-angular  cordate  at  the  base,  lobes  rounded,  sinus  broad,  the  margin  except 
within  the  sinus  bordered  with  distant,  straight  bristle-like  teeth.  Petioles  about 
lin.  long.  Tendrils  simple,  filiform.  Male  flowers  numerous  on  long  pedicels  in 
a short  raceme  (umbel-like)  at  the  end  of  a long  slender  peduncle.  (Flowers  not 
in  a fit  state  for  describing.)  Fruit  solitary  on  a stouc  peduncle  in  the  same  axil 
with  the  male  inflorescence  echinate,  oval,  about  fin.  long,  when  ripe  ejecting  the 
seed  like  the  Squirting  Cucumber.  Seeds  ik  lines  long,  base  tapering,  upper  end 
obtuse,  about  2 lines  broad,  flat,  faces  pitted,  margins  thick. 

Hab.:  Thursday  Island,  E.  Cowley  (inflorescence  1893). 

I only  obtained  fruit  in  1897.  When  this  plant  can  be  more  fully  studied,  it  may  be  removed 
to  Melothria ; however,  at  present  I think  it  better  placed  as  above. 

12.  MUKIA,  Arn. 

(From  “ Murra,”  its  name  in  Malabar.) 

Calyx  in  the  males,  and  free  part  of  it  in  the  females,  turbinate-campanulate, 
5-toothed.  Corolla  rotate,  divided  to  the  calyx  into  5 acute  lobes.  Stamens  in 
the  males  3,  filaments  short,  free  ; anthers  two  with  2 cells,  one  with  1 cell,  the 
cells  parallel  and  straight,  the  connective  produced  into  a short  point  beyond 
them  ; the  females  without  staminodia.  Ovary  in  the  females  with  2 or  3 
placentas  and  several  horizontal  ovules ; style  clavate,  with  a thick  2 or  3-lobed 
stigma.  Fruit  a globular  berry.  Seeds  few,  compressed,  scrobiculate. — Scabrous- 
hispid  annuals,  with  the  habit  of  (Juciuim.  Leaves  angular  or  rarely  lobed. 
Flowers  small,  yellow,  the  males  clustered  an  1 pedicellate,  the  females  solitary 


and  sessile  or  nearly  so. 

Leaves  subdeltoid,  angular  or  3 to  5-lobed.  Fruit  globular,  nearly  Jin.  in 

diameter.  Seeds  about  2 lines  long 1.  .17.  scabrella. 

Leaves  triangular-ovate.  Fruit  oval,  about  ljin.  long.  Seeds  about  3J  lines 

long 2 . M.  celcbica. 

1.  1YI.  scabrella  (rough),  Am.  in  Hook.  Juurn.  But.  iii.  276 ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  321.  Rather  slender,  but  very  scabrous-hispid.  Leaves  shortly 


petiolate,  deeply  cordate,  from  broadly  triangular  to  ovate-lanceolate,  and  more  or 
less  hastate  with  broad  rounded  or  angular  lobes,  usually  obtuse,  obscurely 
crenate  or  rarely  shortly  3 or  5-lobed,  mostly  under  2in.  long.  Male  flowers 
clustered  in  the  axils,  the  pedicels  2 to  8 lines  long  ; females  almost  sessile. 
Calyx  hirsute,  above  1 line  long,  with  small  linear  teeth.  Corolla  lobes  about 
1 line  long.  Adnate  part  of  the  calyx-tube  or  ovary  in  the  females  about  2 lines 
long,  densely  hirsute  with  long  white  hairs.  Style  surrounded  by  a cup-shaped 
disk.  Berry  globular,  sometimes  attaining  Jin.  diameter. — Wight,  Ic.  t.  501  ; 
Naud.  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  4,  xii.  142  ; Melothria  iiiculerasjiatana , Cogn.  in  DC. 
Mon.  Phan.  iii.  628. 


700 


LVII.  CUCURBITACEjE. 


[Mukia. 


Hub.:  Humpybong,  Dr.  Jos.  Bancroft;  Keppel  and  Shoalwater  Bays  and  Northumberland 
Islands,  E.  Brown  ; Burdekin  and  Gilbert  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Port  Curtis  and  Lizard 
Island,  M'Gillivray ; N.E.  coast,  A.  Cunningham;  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy,  Thozet. 

2.  M.  celebica  (of  the  Celebes),  A.  Cogn.  in  DC.  Mon.  Phan.  iii.  025. 
Stems  climbing,  slender,  very  little  branched,  sulcate,  and  sparsely  rough  with 
tubercles.  Leaves  somewhat  rigid,  triangular-ovate,  slightly  trilobed,  pale  green, 
and  roughly  dotted  on  the  upper  side,  densely  villous  beneath  with  grey  hairs, 
margins  creuato- denticulate,  apex  acute  or  shortly  acuminate,  2 to  bin.  long,  and 
almost  as  broad,  the  basal  sinus  very  narrow.  Tendrils  slender,  elongate,  sulcate, 
slightly  hairy.  Pedicel  densely  villous-hirsute,  i to  1 line  long ; male  dowers 
fasciculate,  female  solitary.  Calyx-tube  shortly  villous-hirsute,  base  rounded,  2 
lines  long,  1 line  thick  ; teeth  erect,  subulate,  £ line  long.  Corolla  very  shortly 
villous,  segments  oblong,  apex  obtuse,  1 line  long.  Stamens-filaments  \ line 
long  ; anthers  narrow-oblong,  shortly  ciliate,  base  entire,  apex  shortly  appendi- 
culate,  about  1 line  long.  Fruit  peduncle  2J  to  3 lines  long,  1J  line  thick. 
Fruit  fulvus,  glabrous,  smooth,  about  l|in.  long,  ljin.  thick.  Seeds  brown, 
ovoid-oblong,  shortly  attenuated  at  the  base,  rounded  at  the  apex,  about  8 lines 
long,  H line  broad,  and  f to  1 line  thick. — Melothria  celebica,  Cogn.  l.c. 

Hab.:  No  Australian  habitat  recorded  by  F.  v.  M.  more  than  Queensland  and  North  Australia. 

13.  MELOTHRIA,  Linn. 

(From  its  similarity  to  Briony.) 

Calyx  in  the  males,  and  upper  free  part  of  it  in  the  females,  campanulate, 
shortly  5-toothed.  Corolla  rotate,  deeply  5-lobed,  with  narrow  lobes.  Stamens 
in  the  males  3 ; filaments  short,  free  ; anthers  often  slightly  cohering,  two  with 
2 cells,  one  with  1 cell,  the  cells  straight  and  parallel,  3 small  staminodia  in  the 
females.  Ovary  in  the  females  with  3 placentas  and  several  horizontal  ovules ; 
style  short,  with  3 capitate,  dilated  or  bifid  stigmas.  Fruit  a small  globular 
ovoid  or  fusiform  berry.  Seeds  flat,  oval  or  oblong,  enveloped  in  pulp. — Slender 
climbing  or  prostrate  herbs.  Leaves  triangular  or  palmately  lobed.  Tendrils 
simple.  Flowers  very  small,  yellow,  the  males  in  short  racemes  almost  reduced 
to  pedunculate  umbels  or  sessile  clusters,  the  females  on  slender  axillary  pedicels, 
solitary  or  clustered. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  the  tropical  and  subtropical  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old 


World,  most  abundant  in  Africa. 

Leaves  broadly  triangular  or  hastate.  Male  flowers  in  a pedunculate 

umbel-like  raceme.  Females  on  long  filiform  pedicels 1 . M.  Cunninghamii. 

Leaves  palmately  5 or  7-lobed.  Male  and  female  flowers  minute,  clustered 

in  the  same  axils  on  filiform  but  rather  short  pedicels 2.  M.  Muelleri. 


1.  IVI . Cunninghamii  (after  Allan  Cunningham),  P.  c.  M.  (as  Zehneria) ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  320.  Stems  very  slender,  often  filiform.  Leaves  broadly 
triangular  or  hastate,  irregularly  but  not  deeply  toothed,  or  rarely  obscurely  3 or 
5-lobed,  thin  and  somewhat  scabrous,  the  larger  ones  nearly  3in.  long,  but 
mostly  smaller.  Tendrils  simple,  filiform.  Male  peduncles  slender,  bearing  at 
the  end  a short  corymbose  raceme  almost  reduced  to  an  umbel  of  about  0 
small  yellow  flowers.  Female  flowers  usually  solitary  in  the  axils,  on  filiform 
pedicels  of  1 to  2in.,  with  rarely  a male  flower  in  the  same  axil.  Calyx  about 
1 line  diameter.  Corolla  about  2 lines  diameter.  Ovary  or  calyx-tube  of  the 
females  attenuate  into  a slender  neck.  Stigmas  capitate.  Berry  globular,  3 to  4 
lines  diameter. — Zehneria  Cunninghamii,  F.  v.  M.  in  Hook.  Ivew  Journ.  viii.  51. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  F.  r.  Mueller:  Breakfast  Creek,  Bowman;  Rockhampton, 
Dallachy . 

This  species  is  nearly  allied  to  the  African  M.  triangularis,  Benth.  The  northern  specimens 
in  Herb.  R.  Brown  have  the  leaves  broadly  cordate,  the  flowers  rather  longer  and  the  fruits 
rather  larger,  almost  ovoid,  but  they  appear  to  belong  to  the  same  species.  Benth. 


Melothria.] 


LVII.  CUCURBIT  ACE.®. 


701 


2.  1VI.  lYEaelleri  (after  Baron  von  Mueller),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  320. 
Small  and  rather  slender,  very  scabrous  but  not  hispid.  Leaves  on  long  petioles, 
deeply  cordate,  nearly  orbicular,  1 to  2in.  diameter,  shortly  and  palmately  5 to 
7-lobed,  the  lobes  mostly  obtuse,  coarsely  toothed  or  lobed.  Tendrils  small, 
filiform,  simple.  Flowers  minute,  on  filiform  pedicels  of  2 to  3 lines,  the  males 
and  females  clustered  in  the  same  axils.  Calyx  not  1 line  diameter,  with  minute 
teeth.  Corolla  about  2 lines  diameter,  divided  to  the  calyx  into  obtuse  lobes. 
Ovary  or  calyx-tube  in  the  females  ovoid,  contracted  into  a short  neck,  the  corolla 
smaller  than  in  the  males.  Staminodia  3,  very  small.  Stigmas  remform  or 
shortly  2-lobed.  Berry  globular,  about  Jin.  diameter. — Cucurbita  micrantha, 
F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Phil.  Soc.  Viet.  i.  17  ; Cucumis  ? Muelleri,  Naud.  in  Ann.  Sc. 
Nat.  Ser.  4,  xi.  84  ; Zehneria  micrantha,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  182,  and  PI.  Viet, 
t.  18  ; Mukia  micrantha,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  180  ; iii.  107. 

Hab.:  Georgina  River. 

14.  SICYOS,  Linn. 

(The  Greek  name  of  Cucumber.) 

Calyx  in  the  males  and  free  part  of  it  above  the  narrow  tube  in  the  females 
eampanulate,  with  5 small  subulate  teeth.  Corolla  rotate,  divided  to  the  calyx  into 
5 ovate  lobes.  Stamens  in  the  males  united  in  a column  clavate  at  the  top  and 
more  or  less  lobed,  with  3 to  5 linear  curved  and  fiexuose  anther-cells.  Ovary 
in  the  females  1 -celled  with  one  pendulous  ovule.  Fruit  small,  dry,  ovoid  or 
oblong,  acute  or  beaked,  usually  covered  with  prickles.— Prostrate  or  climbing 
herbs.  Leaves  angular,  or  3 or  5-lobed.  Tendrils  3-branched.  Flowers  small, 
the  males  in  racemes  sometimes  reduced  to  corymbs  or  clusters  ; the  females 
pedicellate  in  the  axils  or  sometimes  in  the  same  raceme  with  the  males. 

The  genus  is  spread  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  New  and  the  Old  World.  The  only 
Australian  species  is  a common  American  one. 

1.  S.  angulata  (3-angular-leavea),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  309  ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  322.  Stems  rather  slender,  but  extending  sometimes  to  a great  length, 
glabrous  or  sparingly  scabrous.  Leaves  on  long  petioles,  from  broadly  ovate- 
cordate  to  almost  reniform,  usually  acutely  3-angled  or  palmately  lobed,  the 
central  angle  or  lobe  the  longest,  of  a thin  texture  and  often  3 to  4in.  long  or 
more.  Male  and  female  flowers  often  in  the  same  axil,  the  males  in  a short 
raceme  on  a long  peduncle,  the  females  in  a small  dense  cluster  on  a very  short 
peduncle.  Calyx  in  the  males  scarcely  above  1 line  diameter  and  the  corolla 
rarely  3 lines,  the  females  still  smaller.  Fruits  ovoid,  rarely  Jin.  long,  densely 
covered  with  barbed  prickles. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  143  ; S.fretensis,  Hook.  f.  in 
Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  vi.  473;  .S',  australis,  Endl.  Prod.  FI.  Norf.  67  ; A.  Gray, 
Bot.  Amer.  Expl.  Exped.  i.  648. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  V.  v.  Mueller. 

A common  weed  in  tropical  and  N America,  widely  dispersed  over  the  Pacific  Isles  and  New 
Zealand,  but  not  recorded  from  Asia  or  Africa. — Benth. 

A.  Gray  distinguishes  .S'.  australis  from  the  common  American  form  chiefly  by  its  smaller 
flowers.  It  is  not  easy  to  judge  of  this  from  dried  specimens  without  soaking,  and  the  size 
appears  variable,  but  certainly  in  some  Australian  specimens  quite  as  large  as  in  the  common 
American  forms. — Benth. 

15.  ALSOMITRA,  Benth.  et  Hook.,  Gen.  PI.  i.  840. 

Calyx  in  the  males  rotate,  5-parted,  segments  oblong  or  oblong-lanceolate. 
Corolla  rotate,  5-parted,  segments  obtuse.  Stamens  5,  filaments  short,  near 
together  at  the  base  ; anthers  small,  oblong,  at  length  recurved,  1-celled;  ovary 
rudimentary.  Female,  with  the  calyx  and  corolla  as  in  the  male;  ovary  elongate- 
clavato,  1-celled  ; styles  3 or  4,  conical,  fleshy,  with  semilunate  stigmas;  ovules 
very  many,  pendulous ; placentas  3,  thick,  vertical,  parietal.  Fruit  large, 


702 


LVII.  CUCLfRBITACExE. 


[Alsomitra. 


elongate-clavate,  terete  or  sub-trigonous,  truncate  and  3-valved  at  the  apex. 
Seeds  very  many,  compressed  vertical  in  6 rows,  much  corrugated,  incised  or 
horned  on  the  margin  with  a terminal  membranous  wing  longer  than  the  seed  or 
none. — Large  climbers,  tendrils  simple  or  2-branched.  Leaves  with  3 oblong 
entire  or  serrated  leaflets,  with  usually  2 glands  at  the  base.  Flowers  small, 
dioecious,  in  compound  panicles  with  filiform  branches.— Gen.  PI.  l.c. 

Leaves  3 to  5-lobed,  deep-green.  Petioles  and  peduncles  glandular-pilose, 
membranous,  distantly  repando-denticulate.  Tendrils  simple  or  2 or 

3-tid.  Fruit  papilose-verrucose 1.  A.  capricorniea. 

Leaves  trifoliolate.  Leaflets  ovate-oblong,  entire,  glabrous.  Petiolules 
short,  eglandulous.  Tendrils  simple.  Fruit  smooth.  Seed  dark-brown, 

slightly  rough  on  both  sides 2.  A.  Hookeri. 

Leaves  trifoliolate.  Leaflets  entire,  reticulate ; glands  of  the  petiolules 

with  small  depressed  glands.  Tendrils  simple 3.  A.  Stephensiana. 

Stems  very  long,  with  corky  flanges.  Leaves  trifoliolate.  Leaflets  2 to  4in. 
long.  Tendrils  simple  or  2-branched.  Male  flowers  in  racemose  panicles. 

Female  flowers  solitary . 4.  A.  suberom. 

1.  A.  capricorniea  (from  locality  where  found),  /•'.  r.  M.  Fragni.  vii.  61  ; 
Cogniaux  in  DC.  Mon.  Phan.  iii.  929.  A short  climbing  plant  with  thin,  scarcely 
branching  sulcate  stems.  Petioles  about  lin.  long,  glandular-pilose.  Tendrils 
copious,  sometimes  very  long,  slender,  sulcate  at  the  base  and  often  bifid  at  the 
end.  Leaves  bright-green,  2 to  Sin.  long  and  often  3 to  5-lobed,  the  basal  sinus 
large,  not  deep  ; lobes  deltoid.  Common  peduncle  about  lin.  long  ; pedicels  of 
the  male  flowers  capillary,  glabrous,  about  1 line  long.  Calyx-lobes  5,  semilanceo- 
late  acute,  the  tube  as  long  as  the  lohes,  also  glabrous.  Corolla  light-yellow, 
membranous,  campanulate,  5-lobed,  lobes  broad-ovate,  almost  acute,  scarcely  1 
line  long.  Filaments  forming  a glabrous  column  scarcely  ^ line  long.  Anthers 
pale-yellow,  £ line  long,  when  expanded  almost  orbicular.  Fruit  peduncles  4 to 
5 lines  long,  slender,  pilose.  Capsule  subcylindrical,  i-ounded  at  the  base,  green, 
chartaeeous,  fragile,  about  lin.  long.  Seeds  spathulate-obovate,  dentate-tuber- 
culate  on  the  margin,  attenuate  at  the  base,  brown,  scarcely  3 lines  long,  with  an 
oblique  terminal  wing  whitish  and  transparent. 

Hab.:  Gracemere,  near  Rockhampton,  P.  A.  O’  Slimiest/  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) ; Cape  Cleveland,  A . 
Cunningham  (Cogniaux  l.c.) 

2.  A.  Hookeri  (after  Sir  J.  I).  Hooker),  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  vi.  188  ; Cogniaux 
in  DC.  Mon.  Phan.  iii.  933.  Branches  angular,  with  a short  pubescence. 
Petioles  slender  sulcate,  shortly  villous  or  nearly  glabrous,  A to  lin.  long.  Leaves 
trifoliolate  ; leaflets  green  on  both  sides,  smooth,  ovate-oblong,  shortly  acuminate, 
2.V  to  4Ain.  long,  1 to  2in.  broad,  the  lateral  ones  slightly  unequal-sided  at  the 
base,  petiolules  short,  eglandulose.  Tendrils  slender,  simple,  very  long,  sulcate 
and  puberulous  Male  panicles  much-branched  with  many  flowers,  terminal  or 
lateral,  flexuose  and  slender,  10  to  20in.  long,  5 to  Tin.  broad  ; pedicels  capillary, 
puberulous,  often  fasciculate,  2 to  7 lines  long,  bracteolate  at  the  base.  Bracteoles 
subulate,  J to  1 line  long,  Calyx  puberulous  ; segments  linear-lanceolate,  £ line 
long,  about  J line  broad.  Corolla  very  short,  puberulous,  greenish-yellow, 
segments  ovate,  obtuse,  3-nerved,  about  1 line  long.  Filaments  scarcely  £ line 
long.  Fruit  ellipsoid-cylindric,  truncate,  brown,  sparsely  pilose,  1 to  2in.  long. 
Seeds  in  outline  subtriangular,  both  margins  bilobed,  base  attenuated,  apex 
truncate,  3^  lines  long,  3 lines  broad  ; wing  oblique,  of  a dirty  white,  transparent, 
oblong,  rounded  at  the  apex,  6 or  7 lines  long,  3 lines  broad. — DC.  Mon. 
Phan.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Cape  York.  IV.  Man  and  Beceari  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 

3.  A.  Stephensiana  (after  T.  B.  Stephens),  Cogniaux  in  DC.  Mon. 
Phan.  iii.  931.  Plant  sparsely  pubescent  or  almost  glabrous.  Leaves  3-foliolate, 
herbaceous  ; leaflets  3i  to  Sin.  long,  2 to  2iin.  broad,  entire  terminal  one  ovate- 


AUamitra  A 


LVII.  CUCURBITACE/E. 


703 


lanceolate,  lateral  ones  oblique-ovate,  reticulation  conspicuous  on  the  under  side. 
Glands  of  the  petiolules  small,  depressed.  Tendrils  simple.  Flowers  unobserved. 
Fruit  pedicels  1 to  lAin.  long.  Fruit  smooth,  ellipsoid-cylindric,  truncate,  3 to 
3Ain.  long,  l^in.  broad  at  the  apex.  Seed  unknown. — Xanonin  Stephensiana , F. 
v.  M.  Fragm.  viii.  181. 

Hab.:  Barnard  Island,  II'.  Hill  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 

4.  A..  suberosa  (stems  corky),  Bail.,  2nd  Suppl.  Si/n.  Ql.  FI.  28.  Plant 
dioecious.  Stems  climbing  to  a great  height,  the  lower  woody  part  furnished 
with  corky  flanges  often  lin.  wide,  the  young  shoots  glabrous  or  slightly  mealy. 
Leaves  trifoliolate  ; leaflets  1A  to  4in.  long,  entire  or  with  a few  obscure  teeth, 
central  one  ovate-lanceolate,  lateral  ones  obliquely  ovate  with  usually  a more  or 
less  prominent  lobe  on  the  outer  edge  near  the  base.  Petiole  1 to  lAin.  long, 
petiolules  ^ to  Ain.  long,  with  hairy  tufts  in  the  axils.  Tendrils  simple  or 
2-branched.  Male  flowers  crowded  in  pedunculate  racemose  panicles  ; pedicels 
about  Ain.  long,  curved  after  the  flower  has  fallen  ; calyx-teeth  5,  about  1 line 
long,  acute,  nearly  glabrous  ; corolla  5-lobed,  when  expanded  A to  lin.  diameter, 
white  tomentose  outside,  pale  yellow  inside.  Stamens  5,  4 in  connate  pairs,  one 
distinct  (giving  the  appearance  of  a 3-stamened  flower)  ; filaments  slender,  short, 
hairy ; anthers  oblong,  length  of  filament.  Female  solitary  on  long  peduucles, 
flowers  similar  but  rather  larger  than  the  males,  with  5 separate  sterile  stamens  ; 
style  thick,  bearing  3 spreading  flexuous  stigmas.  Fruit  oblong-ovate,  variegated, 
3 to  Sin.  long,  with  a diameter  of  about  2in.,  on  a slender  peduncle  of  about  3in. 
Seeds  brown,  thick,  about  Ain.  long,  margin  thick,  irregularly  shaped. 

Hab  : Enoggera  and  Ithaca  scrubs.  Fruit  ripe  in  December. 


Order  LYIII.  CACTE/E. 

Flowers  regular,  hermaphrodite.  Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary,  often  pro- 
duced beyond  it ; lobes  indefinite,  scaly,  leafy  or  petaloid.  Petals  indefinite, 
mostly  numerous,  and  passing  gradually  into  sepals.  Stamens  indefinite, 
inserted  at  the  throat  of  the  calyx ; filaments  filiform  : anthers  minute,  oblong. 
Ovary  inferior,  1 -celled ; placentation  parietal;  ovules  very  numerous;  style 
single,  filiform  ; stigmas  2 or  several,  spreading.  Fruit  a berry. — Fleshy  leafless 
shrubs  of  very  characteristic  habit.  All  American,  except  a Ilhipsalix. 

Calyx-tube  produced  beyond  the  ovary,  scaly,  with  adnate  exteri  >r  sepals.  Stamens 

many-seriate  upon  the  corolla-tube.  Stems  angled  or  ribbed.  Flowers  lateral  . 1.*Cf,reus. 
Calyx-tube  not  produced  above  the  ovary.  Stems  often  flat-jointed,  flat  or  terete. 

Flowers  lateral.  Berry  aculeate 2.‘Opuktia. 


1.  -CEREUS,  Haw. 

(From  cereus,  pliant;  in  reference  to  the  shoots  of  some  species.) 

Calyx-tube  long,  prolonged  over  the  ovary,  lobes  numerous,  in  many  series, 
exterior  ones  squamiform  ; interior  ones  elongated,  spirally  imbricate.  Petals 
numerous,  in  many  series,  recurvo-patent.  Stamens  very  numerous,  in  2 or 
many  series  ; filaments  adnate  at  the  base  to  the  calyx-tube,  the  upper  part  free. 
Style  filiform  ; stigmatic  lobes  f>  or  many  radiate.  Berry  squamose  or  tubercu- 
lose. — Fleshy  shrubs,  with  a woody  axis,  and  medulliferous  inside ; angles 
vertical,  bearing  fascicles  of  spines,  regularly  furrowed.  Flowers  large,  rising 
from  the  fascicles  of  spines  or  indentures  on  the  angles  of  the  stems. 

1.  C.  triangularis  (stem  three-angular),  JJair.  Stems  climbing  and  rooting 
into  the  bark  of  trees,  3 rarely  4-angular,  the  angles  flattened.  Flowers  lateral, 
solitary,  very  large,  white.  Fruit  oblong-globose,  3 to  4in.  long,  2.Vin.  broad. 

Hab.:  Brazil.  This  species  may  frequently  be  seen  in  old  deserted  gardens  climbing  up  and 
along  the  branches  of  trees. 

Fruit  edible. 


701 


LVIII.  CACTEiE. 


2.  *OPUNTIA,  Mill. 

(Some  species  plentiful  near  Opus,  a city  of  Locris.) 

Sepals  and  petals  numerous,  adnate  to  the  ovary,  not  produced  into  a tube  ; 
the  interior  petaloid,  obovate,  spreading.  Stamens  numerous,  shorter  than  the 
petals.  Style  cylindrical,  constricted  at  the  base ; stigmas  numerous,  thick, 
erect.  Berry  umbillicate  at  the  apex,  tuberculate,  often  prickly.  Embryo 
somewhat  spiral,  nearly  terete ; plumule  small. — Shrubby  plants  with  articulate 
branches ; the  joints  (rarely  terete)  mostly  compressed  and  dilated,  bearing 
fascicles  of  prickles  or  bristles  arranged  in  a quincuncial  spiral  order.  Flowers 
yellow,  red  or  purple,  arising  from  the  clusters  of  prickles  or  along  the  margins  of 
the  joints.  Stamens  somewhat  irritable. 

1.  O.  vulgaris  (common),  Mill.  Prickly  Pear.  Joints  ovate,  prickles 
short,  numerous,  usually  with  several  strong  subulate  spines.  Flowers  yellow. 
Fruit  crimson,  nearly  smooth. 

Hab.:  Overruns  many  inland  localities. 

2.  O.  ferox  (fierce),  Hmc.  Joints  oblong,  elongated;  prickles  strong, 
setaceous,  numerous,  whitish,  in  fascicles,  longer  than  the  wool  from  which  they 
issue,  one  of  which  in  each  fascicle  is  longer  than  the  rest.  Flowers  yellow. 
Fruit  red. 

Hab.:  This  species  has  become  naturalised  in  the  Goondiwindi  district. 


Order  L1X.  FICOIDE.®. 

Calyx  persistent,  free  or  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base,  divided  to  the  middle 
or  to  the  base  into  5 or  4 rarely  more  or  only  3 lobes  or  segments,  imbricate  in 
the  bud  or  very  rarely  valvate.  Petals  none  or  indefinite  and  narrow,  very  rarely 
equal  in  number  to  the  calyx  segments,  inserted  at  their  base.  Stamens  few  or 
many,  usually  indefinite,  or  not  corresponding  in  number  to  the  calyx-lobes,  or 
rarely  equal  in  number  to  them,  inserted  on  the  calyx-tube,  or  liypogynous  when 
the  calyx  is  divided  to  the  base ; filaments  free  or  united  in  a cup  at  the  base ; 
anthers  with  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  inferior,  half  superior 
or  superior,  3 to  5 or  more  celled,  rarely  2-celled  or  reduced  to  a single  carpel  ; 
styles  as  many  as  cells,  free  or  united  at  the  base,  usually  filiform  and  stigmatic 
alon"  the  inner  side,  or  rarely  with  terminal  stigmas  or  very  short;  ovules  1,2 
or  more  in  each  cell  usually  inserted  on  a basal  placenta  more  or  less  adnate  to 
the  axis  or  inner  angle  of  the  cell.  Fruit  a capsule  or  rarely  fleshy  or  drupaceous, 
opening  loculicidally,  septicidally,  or  both,  in  as  many  or  twice  as  many  valves 
as  cells,  or  transversely  circumsciss  or  indehiscent.  Seeds  with  a crustaceous  or 
rarely  membranous  or  thick  testa,  usually  compressed.  Embryo  curved  round  a 
mealy  albumen. — Herbs  or  rarely  undershrubs  or  almost  shrubby.  Leaves 
alternate  or  more  rarely  opposite,  entire,  often  succulent.  Flowers  either 
solitary,  terminal,  leaf-opposed  or  in  the  forks  of  the  stems,  or  in  axillary  cymes 
or  clusters. 

The  Older  is  widely  dispersed  over  the  globe,  although  not  extending  to  very  cold  regions, 
the  majority  of  species  inhabiting  sandy  or  rocky  seacoasts  or  dry  wastes  or  spreading  as 
weeds  of  cultivation,  and  particularly  abundant  in  S.  Africa.  Of  the  8 Australian  genera,  3 are 
generally  .distributed  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  globe.  3 are  especially  South  African,  with 
a few  of  their  numerous  species  dispersed  over  a wider  range,  and  2 small  ones  are  endemic  in 
Australia. — Bent  It. 

Tribe  I.  IVlesembryese. — Caly.rtube  minute  to  the  ovary , either  entirely  so  or  produced 
above  it. 

Petals  numerous,  linear 1 • Mesembrtanthemcm. 

Petals  none t ktragonia. 


LIX.  FICOIDE&.  705 

Tribe  II.  Aizoidese. — Calyx  free,  but  with  a distinct  turbinate  tube,  beariuq  the  stamens  at 
or  below  the  top.  Petals  none. 

Capsule  opening  in  valves. 

Stamens  indefinite 3.  Aizoon. 

Stamens  4 4.  Gunnia. 

Capsule  circumsciss. 

Styles  and  ovary-cells  3 to  5 5.  Sesuvium. 

Styles  and  ovary-cells  2 or  1 6.  Trianthema. 

Tribe  III.  (or  Suborder).  lYXolluguneae. — Calyx  free , divided  to  the  base  or  nearly  so. 

Petals  5 or  fewer  or  none. 

(When  the  calyx  is  divided  quite  to  the  base,  the  stamens,  inserted  as  in  the  rest  of  the  Order 
below  the  lobes,  are  necessarily  hypogynous.  In  a few  species  the  base  of  the  calyx  is  slightly 
developed  and  then  the  stamens  are  somewhat  perigynous.  The  group  has  been  frequently 
referred  to  Caryophylleee  or  to  Portulacea,  with  both  of  which  as  with  Ficoidece,  Phytolaccacece, 
Chenopodiaceic,  A mar  a n taeece,  &c.,  it  agrees  in  the  seeds  and  embryo.  It  differs,  however,  both 
from  Caryophylleee  and  Portulacece  in  the  divided  ovary  as  well  as  in  habit,  and  although  cer- 
tainly allied  to  those  two  as  well  as  to  Phytolaccacece,  it  appears  to  me  to  be  much  more 
closely  connected  with  the  tribe  Aizoidece  of  Ficoidece  through  Trianthema.  Like  all  the  Ficoidecc 
it  is  remarkable  for  the  general  want  of  symmetry  between  the  stamens  and  the  other  parts  of 


the  flower. — Benth.) 

Stamens  8,  united  in  a cup  at  the  base.  Ovules  1,  2,  or  rarely  3 in 

each  cell 7.  Macarthuria. 

Stamens  few  or  many,  free  or  rarely  slightly  united  when  very 

numerous.  Ovules  many  or  rarely  3 or  4 in  each  cell 8.  Mollugo. 


1.  MESEMBRYANTHEMUM,  Linn. 

(Name  referring  to  the  flowers  opening  at  midday.) 

Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary ; lobes  5 or  rarely  more  or  fewer.  Petals 
numerous,  linear,  in  one  or  more  series.  Stamens  numerous,  in  several  series. 
Ovary  inferior,  with  5 or  more,  rarely  4,  cells,  each  with  numerous  ovules  ; styles 
as  many  as  cells  of  the  ovary,  free  or  connate  at  the  base,  stigmatic  along  the 
inner  side.  Capsule  surrounded  by  the  persistent  calyx,  the  summit  flat  and 
loculicidally  dehiscent.  Seeds  minute,  with  a crustaceous  testa. — Herbs  or  under- 
shrubs, more  or  less  succulent.  Leaves  opposite  or  alternate,  fleshy,  entire  or 
rigidly  ciliate,  without  stipules.  Flowers  showy,  terminal  or  in  the  forks  of  the 
branches,  or  leaf-opposed. 

The  species  are  very  numerous  in  S.  Africa,  a few  spreading  along  the  seashore  to  various 
parts  of  the  world. 

Leaves  opposite,  triquetrous,  linear  or  oblong. 

Leaves  mostly  above  Lin.  Flowers  about  l£in.  diameter  on  rather  long 


pedicels 1.  M.  ceqnilaterale. 

Leaves  mostly  under  lin.  Flowers  not  above  lin.  diameter,  sessile  or 
shortly  pedicellate  in  tufts  of  leaves  at  the  nodes 2.  M.  australe. 


1.  1YI.  aequilaterale  (leaves  equal-sided),  Hate.:  Hook.  f.  FI.  Tastn.  i.  146; 
Benth.  FI.  Anstr.  iii.  324.  Perennial,  with  robust  prostrate  stems,  extending 
sometimes  to  a considerable  length,  with  short  ascending  flowering  branches,  or 
sometimes  more  ascending  from  the  base.  Leaves  opposite,  stem-clasping, 
thickly  linear-triquetrous,  equal-sided  or  laterally  compressed,  attaining  2 to  Sin. 
Flowers  rather  large,  red,  pedicellate  or  nearly  sessile  within  the  last  small  pair 
of  leaves.  Calyx-tube  turbinate,  Jin.  long  or  rather  more  ; lobes  unequal,  the 
two  larger  ones  often  as  long  as  the  tube,  with  prominent  angles  decurrent  on  the 
calyx  and  pedicel,  or  the  calyx  quite  terete.  Petals  spreading  to  about  ljin. 
diameter.  Styles  and  ovary-cells  varying  from  6 to  10.  Fruit  about  the 
size  of  a large  gooseberry. — M.  aquilaterale,  M.  ylducescem,  M.  Boss!,  and 
M.  niyrexccns,  Haw.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  429;  Salm-Dyek,  Monogr.  j 19,  f.  1,  2,  3 ; 
M.  pra:t-o.r,  F.  v.  M.  in  Linntea,  xxv.  384. 

Hab.:  Plains  of  the  Condamine,  Leichhardt,  as  well  as  on  the  coast  sand. 

The  same  species  is  also  found  on  the  coasts  of  Chili  and  California,  and  scarcely  differs  from 
the  8.  African  M.  acinaciformte,  Linn.,  except  in  the  leaves  not  so  thick  and  the  flowers 
smaller. — Benth. 


706 


LlX.  ficoide^:. 


[Mesembnja  ntlieni  unt . 


2.  m.  australe  (Australian),  Boland.  in  Ait.  Hurt.  Ken,  ed.  1,  ii.  187  ; 
lir nth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  821.  Perennial,  with  prostrate  stems  rooting  at  the  nodes, 
the  flowering  branches  very  short,  or  reduced  to  clusters  of  leaves  surrounding 
the  peduncle.  Leaves  opposite,  triquetrous  or  somewhat  flattened  and  oblong, 
obtuse  or  rarely  almost  acute,  4 to  fin.  long.  Flowers  reddish,  solitary  in  the 
axillary  clusters  of  leaves,  or  terminating  very  short  leafy  branches,  the  pedicels 
from  rather  shorter  than  the  leaves  to  twice  their  length.  Calyx-tube  turbinate, 

2 to  8 lines  long ; lobes  unequal,  the  two  larger  ones  as  long  as  or  rarely  longer 
than  the  tube,  and  rarely  forming  slightly  prominent  lines  decurrent  on  it. 
Petals  spreading  to  about  lin.  diameter.  Styles  and  ovary-cells  usually  5. — DC. 
Prod.  iii.  428  ; Salm-Dyck,  Monogr.  § 18,  f.  2 ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  147  ; 
M.  clavellatuin,  Haw.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  428  ; Salm-Dyck,  Monogr.  § 18,  f.  1 ; 
M.  danimm,  Willd.  Enum.  Suppl.  86  (name  only,  referred  to  M.  australe  in 
Link,  Enum.  Hort.  Berol.  ii.  51). 

Hab.:  Queensland  (without  locality),  I1’,  v.  Mueller. 

The  species  is  found  also  on  the  seacoasts  of  New  Zealand  and  the  islands  of  the  South 
Pacific,  and  is  probably  not  really  distinct  from  the  S.  African  If.  crassi/olium,  Linn. 

2.  TETRAGONIA,  Linn. 

(Calyx  angled.) 

(Tetragonella,  Miq.) 

Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary  at  the  base  and  usually  produced  above  it ; 
lobes  4 or  5,  or  rarely  8.  Petals  none.  Stamens  indefinite,  few  or  many, 
inserted  at  the  top  of  the  calyx-tube,  free  but  usually  in  clusters  alternating  with 
the  lobes.  Ovary  inferior,  2 to  8-celled,  with  1 pendulous  ovule  in  each  cell,  the 
summit  convex  or  conical,  and  rarely  containing  a second  erect  ovule.  Styles  as 
many  as  cells,  linear,  stigmatic  along  the  inner  side.  Fruit  indehiscent  with  a 
hard  almost  bony  endocarp,  the  herbaceous  or  almost  fleshy  epicarp  (or  persistent 
calyx)  often  variously  horned  or  tubercular. — -Herbs  or  undershrubs.  Leaves 
alternate,  flat  but  rather  thick,  without  stipules.  Flowers  solitary  or  few  together 
in  the  axils,  sessile  or  pedicellate,  usually  of  a yellowish  or  reddish -green. 

The  "enus  comprises  several  8.  African  species,  besides  a few  dispersed  over  the  seacoasts  of 
New  Zealand,  the  Pacific  Islands,  and  some  parts  of  Asia  and  America. 

1.  T.  expansa  (a  spreading  plant),  Murr.:  DC.  Prod.  iii.  452 ; Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  825.  Decumbent  or  prostrate,  often  extending  to  several  feet.  Leaves 
petiolate,  the  larger  ones  ovate,  triangular  or  broadly  hastate,  2 to  4in.  long, 
entire,  obtuse  or  acute,  the  smaller  ones  narrower.  Flowers  small,  yellow,  on 
very  short  pedicels  or  almost  sessile  in  the  axils,  solitary  or  2 together.  Calyx- 
tube  broadly  turbinate,  a little  above  1 line  diameter  ; lobes  broad  and  obtuse, 
about  as  long  as  the  tube.  Stamens  in  clusters  of  8 or  4 opposite  each  sinus  of 
the  calyx.  Ovary  half-inferior,  the  free  portion  depressed-hemispherical,  with  3 
to  8 external  furrows  and  as  many  cells.  Fruit  hard,  J to  4in.  diameter,  from 
nearly  globular  and  almost  without  protuberances  to  turbinate,  angular,  with  2, 

3 or  more  hard  prominent  horns,  the  endocarp  woody. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i. 
147  ; Bot.  Mag.  t.  2362  ; Payer  in  Ann.  Sc.  Nat.  ser.  3,  xviii.  t.  13;  T.  inermis, 
F.  v.  M.  in  Linmea,  xxv.  384. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart.  A very  common  coast  plant. 

The  species  is  also  on  the  coasts  of  New  Zealand,  extratropical  8.  America,  and  Japan,  and 
has  been  cultivated  in  Europe  as  “ New  Zealand  8pinach.” 


3.  AIZOON,  Linn. 

(From  the  Greek,  meaning  always  alive.) 

Calyx  free,  deeply  4 or  5-lobed.  Petals  none.  Stamens  indefinite,  usually 
about  20,  inserted  at  the  top  of  the  calyx-tube,  free,  but  more  or  less  in  clusters 
alternating  with  the  lobes.  Ovary  superior,  enclosed  in  the  calyx-tube,  5-celled 


Aizonni] 


LIX.  FTCOIDEiE. 


707 


or  in  the  Australian  species  4-celled,  with  2 or  more  ovules  in  each  cell  ; styles 
as  many  as  cells,  filiform,  stiginatic  along  the  inner  side.  Capsule  surrounded  by 
the  persistent  calyx,  depressed,  opening  loculicidally  in  as  many  valves  as  cells,  or 
in  the  Australian  species  the  valves  split  septicidally. — Herbs  or  undershrubs. 
Leaves  alternate  or  rarely  opposite,  without  stipules.  Flowers  solitary  or  divari- 
cately cymose. 

The  genus  is  chiefly  African,  and  especially  S.  African,  but  extending  to  N.  Africa  and  S. 


Europe. 

Plant  scurfy-tomentose.  Leaves  narrow-linear 1.  A.  quadrifidum. 

Plant  glabrescent.  Leaves  ovate-lanceolate 2.  A.  zygophylloides. 


1.  A.  quadrifidum  (capsule  four- valved),  F.  /•.  M.  Frar/m.  ii.  148;  Benth. 

FI.  Arntr.  iii.  827.  A rigid  shrub,  probably  small,  with  divaricate  opposite  or 
dichotomous  branches,  covered  as  well  as  the  leaves  with  a dense  but 
close  almost  scurfy  tomentum.  Leaves  opposite,  narrow-linear,  obtuse, 
rather  thick  and  soft,  not  above  iin.  long  in  the  specimens.  Flotvers 
shortly  pedicellate,  terminal  or  in  the  forks.  Calyx  tomentose;  tube  short, 
broadly  turbinate,  the  ribs  not  prominent;  lobes  -J,  valvate,  ovate-acuminate, 
about  8 lines  long.  Stamens  numerous,  densely  crowded  opposite  the 

sinus  of  the  calyx,  more  distant  opposite  the  lobes ; filaments  slender,  more  or 
less  covered  like  the  ovary  with  transparent  vesicular  cells,  about  as  long  as  the 
calyx-lobes.  Ovary  truncate  on  the  top,  d angled,  4-celled,  with  4 styles  stigmatic 
along  their  inner  side.  Ovules  numerous.  Capsule  almost  free,  obpyramidal- 
truncate,  septicidally  dehiscent  in  4 truncate  valves,  loculicidally  divided  almost 
to  the  base. — Sesuriwn  quadrifidum,  F.  v.  M.  Rep.  Babb.  Exped.  9. 

Hab.:  Southern  border  towards  Cooper’s  Creek,  .7.  Ivory. 

2.  A.  zygophylloides  (Zygophyllum-like),  /■’.  r.  M.  Frar/m.  vii.  129.  The 
young  branches  densely  clothed  with  papulose  scales.  Leaves  lanceolate-ovate, 
attaining  a width  of  5 lines,  opposite,  glabrescent.  Flowers  solitary,  calyx  deeply 
4-fid,  lobes  lanceolate-oblong,  yellow  on  the  inside,  not  at  all  acuminate,  almost 
glabrous.  Stamens  very  numerous  ; styles  4 ; ovary  4-celled  ; ovules  numerous. 

Hab.:  Queensland  (without  locality),  F.  v.  Mueller. 

This  plant,  as  seen  from  the  fragmentary  specimens  examined,  seems  more  a distinct  species 
than  a form  of  A.  quadrifidum,  from  which  it  is  mostly  distinguished  by  being  more  glabrous, 
and  by  the  form  of  the  leaves  and  lobes  of  the  calyx. — F.  r.  M.  l.c. 


4.  GUNNIA,  F.  v.  M. 

Calyx  free,  deeply  divided  into  4 lobes,  valvate  in  the  bud.  Petals  none. 
Stamens  4,  inserted  on  the  calyx-tube  and  alternating  with  its  lobes.  Ovary 
superior,  enclosed  in  the  calyx,  4-celled,  with  several  ovules  in  each  cell ; styles 
4,  filiform,  stigmatic  along  the  inner  side.  Capsule  enclosed  in  the  persistent 
calyx,  opening  loculicidally,  each  valve  splitting  septicidally.  Seeds  numerous, 
small;  testa  thin  and  smooth  ; embryo  curved  round  a mealy  albumen. — Small 
diffuse  annuals.  Leaves  opposite.  Flowers  terminal  or  in  the  forks,  nearly 
sessile. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia. 

1.  Gr.  septifraga  (mode  of  dehiscence),  F.  v.  37.  Hep.  Babb.  Exped.  9 ; 
Benth.  FI.  Arntr.  iii.  327.  The  specimens  described  from  one  small  fragment. 
Branches  slender,  the  single  pair  of  floral  leaves  preserved  linear.  Flowers  nearly 
sessile  in  the  forks  or  terminal.  Calyx-lobes  acute,  about  line  long  when  in 
flower,  2 lines  long  when  in  fruit. 

Hab.:  Southern  border  inland. 


708 


LTX.  FIOOIDE/E. 


5.  SESUVIUM,  Linn. 

(Derivation  obscure.) 

Calyx  free,  deeply  5-lobed.  Petals  none.  Stamens  5,  alternating  with  the 
calyx-lobes  or  indefinite,  often  very  numerous,  inserted  at  the  top  of  the  tube. 
Ovary  free,  enclosed  in  the  calyx,  3 to  5-celled,  with  numerous  ovules  in  each 
cell ; styles  as  many  as  cells,  filiform,  stigmatic  along  the  inner  side,  at  least 
towards  the  end.  Capsule  surrounded  by  the  persistent  calyx,  membranous, 
more  or  less  completely  divided  by  very  thin  dissepiments,  transversely  circum- 
sciss  about  the  middle.  Heeds  several ; testa  coriaceous,  smooth. — Herbs  or 
undershrubs.  Leaves  opposite,  fleshy,  without  stipules,  but  sometimes  with 
scarious  dilatations  of  the  petiole.  Flowers  solitary  or  clustered  in  the  axils  or 
almost  cymose,  the  calyx-lobes  usually  coloured  inside,  with  more  or  less  scarious 
margins. 

The  genus  contains  about  4 species,  spread  over  the  seacoasts  of  the  tropical  and  subtropical 
regions  of  the  globe,  the  Australian  species  being  the  commonest  and  the  most  generally  diffused 
both  in  the  New  and  the  Old  World. — Bentli. 

1.  S.  portulacastrum  (like  a Portulaca),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  453  ; Bentli. 
FI.  A list  r.  iii.  328.  A succulent  herb,  procumbent  or  creeping  and  rooting  at  the 
joints.  Leaves  linear  or  linear-oblong,  contracted  below  the  middle,  broader  and 
stem-clasping  at  the  base,  mostly  1 to  2in.  long,  rather  thick,  fiat  above,  convex 
underneath.  Pedicels  from  very  short  to  rather  longer  than  the  calyx.  Calyx  3 
to  4 lines  long  or  sometimes  more,  the  tube  turbinate,  4 to  1 line  long  ; lobes 
ovate-lanceolate,  green  on  the  back,  scarious  on  the  margins  and  pink  or  purple 
inside,  often  shortly  mucronate  below  the  end.  Stamens  very  numerous,  inserted 
at  the  top  of  the  calyx-tube  and  shorter  than  its  lobes,  the  filaments  sometimes 
shortly  united  at  the  base.  Ovary  3 or  rarely  4-celled.  Capsule  ovoid,  not 
exceeding  the  calyx,  circumsciss  below  the  middle. — Bot.  Mag.  t.  1701. 

Hab.:  E.  coast,  It.  Brown;  Port  Curtis,  M'Gillivray ; Howick’s  Group  and  sandy  shores  of 
the  islands  of  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller : Fitzroy  River,  Thozet. 

The  styles  are  free  to  the  base  in  all  the  flowers  I have  examined,  but  are  occasionally  4 in 
number,  as  in  Psammanthe  marina,  Hance  in  Walp.  Ann.  ii.  (560,  from  the  Chinese  coasts,  which 
appears  to  be  a variety  only  of  S.  portulacastrum,  notwithstanding  that  the  styles  are  really,  as 
described  by  Hance,  shortly  united  at  the  base.— Bentli, 

S.  repens,  Roth,  to  which  the  Indian  specimens  are  referred  in  Wight  and  Arn.  Prod.  361, 
appears  to  be  a variety  or  rather  a state  only  of  S.  portulacoides,  with  smaller  flowers  and  shorter 
and  broader  leaves,  owing,  as  suggested  by  Arnott,  to  want  of  luxuriance. — Bentli. 


6.  TRIANTHEMA,  Linn. 

(From  the  flowers  often  being  in  threes.) 

(Anc-istrostigma,  Fenzl. ) 

Calyx  free,  more  or  less  deeply  5-lobed.  Petals  none.  Stamens  inserted  at 
the  top  of  the  calyx-tube,  either  5 alternating  with  its  lobes  or  indefinite.  Ovary 
free  or  nearly  so,  enclosed  in  the  calyx,  either  2-celled  with  2 styles,  or  1-celled 
(reduced  to  1 carpel)  with  1 excentrical  or  lateral  style  ; ovules  2 or  more  in  each 
cell,  attached  to  a basal  placenta,  free  or  shortly  adnate  to  the  partition.  Capsule 
membranous  or  hard,  transversely  circumsciss,  and  when  2-celled  the  upper 
portion  sometimes  separating  septicidally  into  2 cocci,  and  in  some  species,  not 
Australian,  divided  inside  by  a transverse  partition  under  the  uppermost  seed. 
Seeds  orbicular  or  reniform,  the  testa  often  granular. — Prostrate  or  diffuse  herbs, 
rarely  woody  at  the  base.  Leaves  opposite,  the  twTo  of  each  pair  unequal  in  size, 
the  petioles  often  with  a scarious  dilatation  at  the  base,  but  no  real  stipules. 
Flowers  axillary,  solitary  or  in  cymes  or  clusters.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  often 
somewhat  scarious. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  the  tropical  and  subtropical  regions  of  the  New  as  well  as  the  Old 
World. 


Trianthema,]  LIX.  FICOIDE.ZE.  709 

Ovary  and  fruit  2-celled,  truncate  or  concave  at  the  top.  Styles  2. 

Flowers  clustered 1.  T.  dccandra. 

Ovary  and  fruit  1-eelled,  with  1 style. 

Ovary  and  fruit  truncate  or  concave  at  the  top.  Flowers  clustered. 

Leaves  very  fleshy,  almost  clavate.  Flowers  solitary.  Stamens  10  2.  '/'.  turyidifolia. 


Glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent.  Stamens  5.  Capsule  short  and 


broad 3.  T.  crystalling,. 

Hirsute  with  long  hairs.  Stamens  about  20.  Capsule  with  a 
narrow  beak 4.  T.  pilosa. 

Ovary  and  fruit  acute  or  tapering  into  the  style,  or  rounded  at  the 
top. 

Hirsute,  small  and  densely  tufted.  Flowers  solitary  in  the  axils, 

but  crowded  on  the  plant,  small 5.  T.  rhynchob'dlyptra . 

Glabrous.  Flowers  small,  in  loose  pedunculate  cymes 0.  T.  cypseleoides. 


1.  T.  decandra  (ten-stamened),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  iii.  852;  Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  329.  Procumbent  and  glabrous,  said  to  be  annual,  but  the  specimens 
sometimes  show  a hard  woody  base  ; branches  dichotomous,  rarely  attaining  1ft. 
Leaves  from  broadly  obovate  to  oblong,  f to  lfin.  long,  narrowed  into  a rather 
long  petiole.  Flowers  several  together  in  a cluster,  not  exceeding  the  petiole, 
although  sometimes  very  shortly  pedunculate.  Bracts  and  bracteoles  small  and 
scarious.  Calyx  about  1 line  long  when  in  flower,  somewhat  enlarged  when  in 
fruit,  the  lobes  longer  than  the  tube,  scarious  on  the  margin  and  mucronate  close 
to  the  end.  Stamens  10  to  12  or  sometimes  a few  more.  Ovary  ovoid,  truncate, 
with  a few  prominent  tubercles,  2-celled  ; ovules  2 in  each  cell,  collaterally 
ascending  from  a basal  placenta,  shortly  adnate  to  the  dissepiment ; styles  2. 
Capsule  about  2 lines  long,  the  seeds  superposed  in  each  cell,  the  upper  one 
ascending,  the  lower  one  pendulous  ; when  ripe  the  upper  portion  separating  into 
2 cocci,  opening  on  the  inner  face,  the  lower  portion  circumsciss  below  the 
insertion  of  the  seeds.  Seeds  black,  rugose. — Wight,  Ic.  t.  296 ; F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  i.  172. 

Hab.:  Dawson  and  Burnett  Rivers  and  Peak  Downs,  F.  v.  Mueller  : Funnel  Creek,  Bowman  : 
frequent  in  many  localities. 

2.  T.  turgidifolia  (leaves  turgid),  F.  r.  M.  Frayni.  x.  83.  Plant  with  the 
habit  of  Sesurium,  suffrutescent,  glabrous.  Leaves  very  fleshy,  almost  clavate, 
| to  fin.  long,  2 to  3 lines  thick,  giaucescent,  the  petioles  membranously  dilated 
at  the  base.  Calyx  lobes  5,  not  1 line  long.  Anthers  dorsifixed.  Style 
setaceous,  1 line  long.  Stigma  minute.  Capsule  ovate,  many  seeded,  cir- 
cumscissile,  operculum  lit  line  long,  matured  seeds  few,  black,  pyriform-renate, 
rugulose. 

Hab.:  Queensland  (without  locality),  F.  v.  Mueller. 

3.  T.  crystallina  (with  transparent  vesicles),  Valtl,  DC.  Prod.  iii.  352; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  330.  Glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent  or  covered  with  little 
transparent  vesicles,  prostrate  or  diffuse,  the  wiry  dichotomous  stems  sometimes 
extending  to  1 or  2ft.,  sometimes  short  and  compact.  Leaves  from  oval-oblong 
to  linear.  Flowers  small,  in  axillary  cymes  or  clusters,  much  shorter  than  the 
leaves.  Calyx  about  If  line  long,  the  lobes  narrow,  obtuse,  spreading,  rather 
longer  than  the  tube.  Stamens  5.  Ovary  of  1 carpel,  truncate,  with  2 erect 
ovules  ; style  excentrical.  Capsule  short  and  broad,  the  top  concave,  forming  a 
short  broad  cup  round  the  style.  Seeds  2,  granular,  flat,  obliquely  superposed. — 
Wight  and  Arn.  Prod.  355;  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  171;  T.  f/laiici folia,  F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  i.  172. 

Hab.:  Broadsound,  R.  Brown;  Burdekin  and  Dawson  Rivers,  F.  v.  Mueller;  Cape  River, 
Bowman. 

The  species  is  common  in  tropical  Asia  and  Africa, 


710 


TJX.  FTCOTDE/E. 


Trianthemn . 


4.  T.  pilosa  (hairy),  F.  r.  M.  Fraym.  i.  174;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  330. 
Procumbent,  from  a few  inches  to  above  2ft.  in  length,  hirsute,  with  spreading 
hairs,  particularly  long  and  dense  about  the  inflorescence.  Leaves  obovate, 
narrowed  into  a rather  long  petiole,  the  largest  attaining  about  lin.  Flowers  in 
axillary  sessile  clusters.  Calyx  when  full  grown  about  3 lines  long  ; lobes  ovate- 
lanceolate,  very  open,  as  long  as  the  tube.  Stamens  about  20.  Ovary  of  1 
carpel,  the  style  lateral,  below  the  end,  which  soon  closes  round  it;  ovules  2. 
Capsule  included  in  the  calyx,  produced  into  a cylinder  concave  or  cup-shaped 
at  the  top  round  the  style,  circumsciss  about  the  middle  of  the  basal  seed-bearing 
portion. 

Hal>.:  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  Ilrown. 

5.  T.  rhynchocalyptra  (beaked  capsule),  /-'.  r.  M.  Fraym.  i.  174  ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  330.  Perennial,  forming  dense  prostrate  tufts,  sometimes  only  2 
or  3in.  diameter,  sometimes  woody  at  the  base,  the  branches  extending  to  Gin., 
more  or  less  hirsute,  with  rigid  bristly  or  soft  spreading  hairs.  Leaves  oval  or 
oblong,  obtuse,  rarely  above  Ln.  long,  narrowed  into  a short  petiole.  Flowers 
sessile  and  crowded,  although  solitary  in  each  axil.  Calyx  thin  and  membranous, 
rather  narrow,  about  2 lines  long  or  rather  more  when  in  fruit,  the  lobes  scarcely 
so  long  as  the  tube.  Stamens  about  10.  Ovary  of  one  carpel  obliquely  tapering 
into  the  style,  which  is  rather  long  and  recurved.  Ovules  about  5 or  6,  on 
panicles  of  various  lengths  on  a short  placenta.  Capsule  acute,  circumsciss  below 
the  middle.  Seeds  2 to  5,  minutely  granulose. 

Hab..  Islands  of  the  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  R.  BroiCn. 


6.  T.  cypseleoides  (Cypselea-like),  lienth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  331.  Glabrous, 
prostrate,  slender  and  very  small.  Leaves  obovate  or  orbicular,  scarcely 
above  ^in.  long  in  the  specimens  seen,  on  slender  petioles  dilated  at  the 
base  into  scarious  stipules.  Flowers  small,  in  loose  axillary  pedunculate  cymes 
exceeding  the  leaves,  with  scarious  bracts  under  the  forks  and  pedicels.  Pedicels 
slender,  about  1 line  long.  Calyx  about  1 line  long,  the  lobes  broad,  obtuse,  rather 
longer  than  the  tube.  Stamens  7 to  10.  Ovary  of  1 carpel  short  and  rounded, 
with  6 to  12  ovules  on  funicles  of  various  lengths  ; style  terminal,  but  slightly 
excentrical,  linear  and  recurved.  Capsule  globular,  circumsciss.  Seeds  smooth. 
— Ancistrostiyma  cypseleoides,  Fenzi  Nov.  Stirp.  Decad.  85. 

Hab.:  Norman  and  Gilbert  Rivers,  T.  Gulliver. 


7.  MACARTHURIA,  Hueg. 

Calyx-segments  5,  persistent.  Petals  5 or  none.  Stamens  8,  slightly  peri- 
gynous,  the  filaments  united  in  a cup  at  the  base.  Ovary  free,  enclosed  in  the 
calyx,  3-celled,  with  1,  2,  or  3 ovules  in  each  cell,  attached  to  a basal  placenta  ; 
styles  3,  with  small  terminal  stigmas.  Capsule  enclosed  in  the  persistent  calyx, 
opening  loculicidally  in  three  valves.  Seeds  reniform  or  subglobose,  the  funicle 
expanded  into  a small  cup-shaped  white  arillus. — Rigid  wiry  or  rush-like  herbs  or 
undershrubs.  Leaves  few,  alternate,  narrow,  often  all  reduced  to  scales.  Flowers 
small,  in  lateral  or  terminal  short  irregular  cymes,  or  forming  a spreading 
dichotomous  cyme  with  opposite  bracts. 

The  genus  is  confined  to  Australia. 

1.  IVI.  neocambrica  (N.S.W.  species),  V.  r.  M.  Fraym.  v.  28;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  332.  A diffuse  plant  from  a few  inches  to  over  a foot  broad.  Stem 
leaves  few,  alternate,  oblong-linear  or  linear-cuneate,  rather  thick.  Flowers  in  a 
loose  spreading  dichotomous  cyme  or  panicle,  each  one  pedicellate  in  the  forks  or 


Murarthuria. 


LIX.  FICOIDE.E. 


711 


terminal.  Floral  leaves  on  bracts  very  small,  mostly  opposite  or  nearly  so. 
Calyx  about  1 line  long.  Petals  about  as  long  as  the  calyx,  perhaps  sometimes 
wanting.  Ovules  1 in  each  cell  of  the  ovary  ; styles  rather  short. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Moreton  Bay. 


8.  MOLLUGO,  Linn. 

(A  name  in  “ Pliny,”  retained  by  Linnaeus.) 

(Glinus,  Linn.;  Trigastrotheca.  l'\  v.  .M.) 

Calyx  segments  5,  persistent.  Petals  none.  Stamens  few  or  many,  free, 

sometimes  with  the  addition  of  a few  staminodia,  of  which  1 to  5 external  ones 
represent  petals,  alternating  with  the  calyx- segments.  Ovary  3 to  o-celled,  with 
several  ovules  in  each  cell ; styles  as  many  as  cells,  linear  or  clavate.  Capsule 
membranous,  enclosed  in  the  persistent  calyx,  opening  loculicidally  in  as  many 
valves  as  cells.  Seeds  with  a smooth  or  granulate  testa,  the  funicle  sometimes 
thickened  into  a small  white  arillus  or  strophiole,  with  or  without  a filiform 
appendage. — Erect  or  diffuse  herbs,  mostly  annual.  Radical  leaves  rosulate,  but 
often  disappearing  before  the  flowering.  Stem-leaves  alternate,  but  often 
clustered  in  the  axils  so  as  to  appear  verticillate.  Stipules  very  small  and 
fugacious.  Flowers  small,  the  pedicels  usually  clustered  in  the  axils,  sometimes 
forming  cymes,  umbels  or  racemes. 

The  genus  is  abundantly  diffused  over  the  warmer  regions  of  the  globe,  extending  into  Europe 
and  North  America. 

Section  I.  Glinus.  -Seeds  stropliiolutc , with  a filiform  appendage  (resembling  a jnnicle) 
more  or  less  encircling  them. 

Softly  tomentose.  Flowers  rather  large,  in  axillary  clusters.  Stamens  about 


10  to  15 1.  .1/.  Glinus. 

Quite  glabrous.  Flowers  rather  large,  in  terminal  clusters.  Stamens  about  15  2.  .1/.  orygioides. 

Glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent.  Flowers  rather  small,  in  axillary  clusters. 

Stamens  under  10 3.  .1/.  Spergula. 

Section  II.  IVIollug'O. — Seeds  without  tiny  strophiola. 

Glabrous,  stems  much-branched,  leafy.  Seeds  covered  with  raised  tubercular 

points 4.  M.  stricta. 

Glabrous,  filiform  and  small.  Flowers  small,  on  filiform  pedicels.  Stamens 
5,  the  filaments  not  dilated 5.  .1/.  Cerviana. 


1.  M.  Glinus  (an  old  generic  name),  A.  Rich.  FI.  Abyss,  i.  48  ; Death.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  333.  A rather  coarse  species,  softly  tomentose  all  over,  sometimes 
small  and  erect,  but  usually  diffuse,  procumbent  or  ascending  and  spreading  to 
above  1ft.  Leaves  from  obovate-orbicular  to  oblong-spathulate,  sometimes  above 
lin.  long,  but  usually  much  smaller.  Flowers  clustered  at  the  nodes  on  short 
pedicels  rarely  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Calyx  like  the  rest  of  the  plant  very  tomen- 
tose, segments  21-  to  4 lines  long.  Stamens  about  10  to  15,  with  5 or  fewer 
external  staminodia,  fiat,  very  thin  and  transparent,  often  forked.  Styles  usually 
5,  united  at  the  base.  Capsule  enclosed  in  the  calyx,  5-lobed.  Seeds  numerous"; 
testa  tuberculate,  funicle  thickened  into  a short  strophiole  or  arillus,  with  a long 
filiform  hair-like  white  process  more  or  less  encircling  the  seed. — Glinus  lutoides, 
Linn.  Spec.  PI.  663;  Fenzl  in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  i.  357,  with  the  synonyms 
adduced  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  i.  202. 

Hab.:  Rockhampton,  Thozet,  and  many  other  localities. 

Widely  dispersed  over  the  tropical  and  subtropical  regions  of  the  Old  World,  extending  to 
Europe,  and  found  also  in  various  parts  of  tropical  America.  There  is  a less  tomentose  variety 
with  smaller  flowers,  approaching  3/.  Spergula,  which,  however,  has  not  yet  been  found  in 
Australia  — [tenth. 

2.  M.  orygioides  (like  an  Orygia),  F.  c.  M.  Herb.-,  Death.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
333.  Stout  and  rigid,  apparently  perennial,  dichotomously  branched,  quite 
glabrous.  Leaves  obovate  or  oblong,  all  under  Ain.  in  our  specimens.  Flowers 

Part  ii.  cc 


712 


LIX.  FICOIDEzE. 


[Mollugo. 


rather  large,  in  terminal  clusters,  onwery  short  pedicels.  Outer  calyx-segments 
about  2 lines  long,  with  a narrow  scarious  border,  inner  ones  rather  larger  at  first, 
with  a broader  border,  at  length  8 lines  long,  broadly  ovate,  white  and  scarious, 
with  a greenish  centre.  Stamens  about  15,  with  a few  staminodia,  either  all 
subulate  or  2 or  8 flat  thin  and  transparent.  Styles  3 or  rarely  4,  quite  free. 
Seeds  not  numerous,  larger  than  those  of  M.  < 'flinua , and  the  hair-like  appendage 
to  the  funicle  not  so  long,  only  half-encircling  the  seed. — Glinus  orygioides,  F.  v. 
M.  PI.  Viet.  i.  208. 

Hab  : Towards  Cooper’s  Creek  and  other  inland  localities. 

3.  3VI.  Spergula  (Spurrey-like),  Linn,  Sgee.  131  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  334. 
Glabrous  or  somewhat  pubescent  when  young,  much  and  dichotomously  branched, 
procumbent  and  spreading  to  1ft.  or  more,  or  nearly  erect  when  small.  Leaves 
from  obovate-oblong  to  almost  linear,  sometimes  almost  lin.  long,  much  smaller 
on  the  flowering  branches.  Flowers  in  small  clusters  at  the  nodes,  the  pedicels 
as  long  as  or  longer  than  the  calyx.  Calvx-segments  glabrous,  from  1 to  nearly 
14-  line  long.  Stamens  not  above  10  and  usually  much  fewer,  with  occasionally 
a few  staminodia  amongst  them.  Styles  or  style-branches  and  capsule-valves  3. 
Seeds  rather  numerous,  the  funicle  thickened  into  a small  arillus,  with  a filiform 
process  more  or  less  encircling  the  seed  as  in  )l.  Glinus. — G limns  Mollugo,  Fenzl 
in  Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  i.  350,  with  the  synonyms  adduced  ; F.  v.  M.  PI.  Viet.  i. 
203  ; M.  Fane-  Holt  an  dice,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Phil.  Soc.  Viet.  i.  14;  M.  glinoides, 
A.  Rich.  FI.  Abyss,  i.  48.  not  of  Cambess ; iii.  verticillata,  Roxb.;  M.  parvi.  flora , 
DC.;  PJiarnnceum  parriflontm,  Roth  ; P.  Mollvgn,  Linn  ; Glinux  Mollugo,  Fenzl  ; 
Rheede  Hort.  Mai.  x.  t.  24. 

Hab..  Brisbane  River. 

The  species  is  common  in  tropical  Asia  and  Africa. 

4.  IVI.  stricta  (upright),  Linn.  Ape c.  PL  e.d.  alt.  31  ; F.  c.  M.  2nd  Syst. 
Cens.  Austr.  PI.  53.  Plant  glabrous,  stems  much  branched,  leafy,  about  1ft.  high. 
Leaves  f to  14in.,  whorled  or  opposite,  varying  from  lanceolate-acute  to  obovate- 
obtuse,  much  narrowed  at  the  base  ; the  petioles  hence  obscure.  Cymes  com- 
pound, the  branches  sometimes  racemose.  Sepals  about  14  line  long,  elliptic  or 
round.  Stamens  3 to  5,  filaments  dilated.  Styles  3,  short,  linear.  Capsule  as 
long  as  the  sepals,  globose,  many-seeded.  Seeds  dark  chestnut-coloured,  covered 
with  raised  tubercular  points  ; embryo  curled  into  three-quarters  of  a complete 
circle. — M.  triphylla,  Lour.  FI.  Cochine  79  ; M.  Linkii,  Seringe  in  DC.  Prod.;  iii. 
pentaphylla , Linn.  DC.  l.c. ; Pharnaceum  strictum,  triphyllum,  and  pentaphyllum, 
Spreng.  Syst.  i.  949,  Rheede  Hort.  Mai.  x.  t.  26  ; Clarke  in  Hook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind. 

Hab.:  Given  as  a Queensland  plant  in  F.  v.  M.  2nd  Syst.  Cens.  Austr.  PI.  53. 

5.  IVI.  Cerviana  (an  old  name,  probably  after  some  person  of  the  name  of 
Cervian),  Ser.  in  DC.  Prod.  i.  392  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  334.  A little  slender 
glabrous  annual  of  a few  inches,  with  filiform  branches.  Leaves  in  distant 
clusters,  linear,  mostly  under  4in.  long,  the  radical  ones  sometimes  shorter  and 
oblong.  Pedicels  filiform,  longer  than  the  leaves.  Calyx-segments  about  \ line 
long  when  in  flower,  lengthening  to  nearly  1 line.  Stamens  usually  5,  the  fila- 
ments filiform  from  the  base.  Styles  3,  short,  distinct,  stigmatic  towards  the 
end.  Seeds  numerous,  small,  without  any  appendage  to  the  funicle. — Fenzl  in 
Ann.  Wien.  Mus.  i.  379  ; iii.  umhellata,  Seringe  l.c.;  Pharnaceum  Cerviana,  Linn.; 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  148. 

Hab.:  Queensland,  F.  v.  Mueller. 

The  species  is  diffused  oyer  tropical  and  subtropical  Asia  and  Africa  and  southern  Europe. 


LX.  UMBELLIFER®. 


713 


Order  LX.  UMBELLIFER^). 

Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary;  limb  forming  a slightly  raised  line  round  the 
summit,  or  5-toothed  or  lobed,  or  quite  inconspicuous.  Petals  5,  usually  indexed 
at  the  tip,  more  or  less  imbricate  or  very  rarely  valvate  in  the  bud.  Stamens  5, 
alternating  with  the  petals  and  inserted  with  them  round  the  epigynous  disk  at 
the  summit  of  the  adnate  calyx-tube;  anthers  versatile,  with  parallel  cells  opening 
longitudinally.  Epigynous  disk  within  the  stamens  usually  2-lobed,  variously 
shaped,  free  from  the  styles  or  confluent  with  their  thickened  base  and  therefore 
the  disk-lobes  often  called  stylopodes.  Ovary  inferior,  2-celled  or  very  rarely 
1 -celled  by  abortion,  with  1 anatropous  ovule  in  each  cell,  pendulous  from  the 
summit.  Styles  2,  with  small  terminal  stigmas.  Fruit  usually  separating  into 
2 indehiscent  1-seeded  nut5  or  carpels,  called  mericarpx,  often  leaving  a persistent 
filiform  central  axis  called  a carpophore,  either  entire  or  splitting  into  two.  Each 
carpel  is  marked  with  longitudinal  ribs,  of  which  the  primary  ones  (corresponding 
with  the  calyx-teeth  and  intervening  sinuses)  are  normally  5 to  each  carpel,  i.e.,  2 
lateral  (one  on  each  side)  at  the  commissure  or  junction  of  the  two  carpels,  1 dorsal 
on  the  back  of  the  carpel,  and  2 intermediate  between  the  dorsal  and  lateral  one  on 
each  side,  but  some  of  these  are  occasionally  inconspicuous,  and  in  some  genera  4 
secondary  ribs  to  each  carpel,  between  the  primary  ones,  are  as  conspicuous  or 
more  prominent  than  the  primary  ones.  In  many  genera  there  are  longitudinal 
linear  oil-vessels  called  vittcc,  within  or  under  the  pericarp.  Seed  often  adhering 
to  the  pericarp  ; testa  very  thin  ; albumen  horny,  filling  the  seed  or  furrowed  or 
excavated  on  the  inner  face  (next  the  commissure).  Embryo  minute  near  the 
apex  of  the  seed,  with  the  radicle  superior. — Herbs  or  very  rarely  shrubs,  with 
alternate  leaves,  often  much  cut  or  divided,  the  petiole  usually  dilated  into  a 
sheathing  base,  but  without  distinct  stipules,  except  in  Hydrocotyle.  Flowers 
usually  small,  in  terminal  or  lateral  (leaf-opposed)  umbels,  which  are  either 
compound,  each  ray  of  the  general  umbel  bearing  a partial  umbel,  or  simple  or 
reduced  to  a globular  head.  Bracts  at  the  base  of  the  general  umbel,  either  one 
under  each  ray  or  fewer,  termed  the  general  involucre,  and  one  or  three  or  more 
under  the  partial  umbel  termed  the  involucel  or  partial  involucre,  or  one  or  both 
involucres  wanting.  Flowers  frequently  more  or  less  polygamous,  some,  in  the 
same  or  different  umbels  from  the  perfect  ones,  being  males  by  the  constant 
abortion  of  the  ovary,  and  occasionally  one  or  a few  in  the  centre  of  the  umbel 
females  without  stamens. 

A numerous  Order,  more  or  less  represented  nearly  all  over  the  globe,  especially  in  the 
temperate  region  of  the  northern  hemisphere,  where  the  delimitation  of  the  very  numerou 
genera  presents  the  greatest  difficulties. — Benth. 

Series  I.  Heterosciadiae.—  Umbels  simple  or  irreyularly  compound.  Vitt<c  none.  Seeds 
laterally  compressed. 

Tribe  I.  Hydrotyleae. — Fruit  laterally  compressed  ; commissure  narrow. 

Creeping  perennials  or  slender  annuals  with  scarious  stipules 1.  Hydrocotyle. 

Annuals  or  perennials  with  dissected  or  toothed  leaves  without  stipules. 

Fruit  very  flat 2.  Trachymene. 

Leafless  plant  with  rush-like  stems 3.  Siebera. 

Umbels  compound,  sometimes  reduced  to  1 or  2 flowers  with  bracts  under  the 

flower  as  well  as  under  the  pedicel. 

Calyx-teeth  small  or  inconspicuous.  Perennials  or  shrubs,  usually  glabrous. 

Leaves  entire  or  ternately  divided  into  small  narrow  lobes.  Involucral 


bracts  small 3.  Siebera. 

Calyx-lobes  peltate,  cordate  or  usually  attached  by  the  whole  of  their  broad 
base.  Herbs  villous  or  glabrous.  Leaves  toothed,  lobed  or  divided,  or 
rarely  entire.  Involucral  bracts  conspicuous 4.  Xanthosia. 

Tribe  II.  Saniculeas. — Fruits  scarcely  compressed  or  compressed  dorsally,  without  vie 
usually  furrowed  at  the  commissure.  Seed  terete  or  dorsally  compressed. 

Umbels  simple.  Ovary  and  fruit  of  a single  ovule  and  seed 5.  Actixotur. 

1 leads  of  flowers  simple,  dense.  Leaf-lobes  and  involucral  bracts  rigid  and 
pungent-pointed Eryxoium, 


714 


LX.  UMBELLIFERyE. 


Series  IT.  Haplozyerim. — Fruit  slightly  nr  not  compressed.  Carpels  with  .5  prominent  ribs 
mid  usually  1 ritta  under  each  furrow. 

Tribe  III.  Ammineae. — Fruit  laterally  compressed  : commissure  constricted  or  silicate. 


Leaves  entire.  Flowers  greenish-yellow.  Seeds  tapering,  convex,  liattish  in 

front 7.*Bupleuru5I. 

Leaves  dissected.  Umbels  pedunculate,  and  the  general  involucre  of  a few 

dissected  bracts II.*  Ainu. 

Constricted  at  the  commissure.  Seeds  terete 10.  Sum. 

Tribe  IV.  Seselinese.  — Cross  section  of  the  fruit  circular  or  nearly  so,  or  the  .ncricarj 
slightly  dorsal : commissure  broad. 

Fruit  with  all  the  ridges  equal,  broad,  obtuse,  corky 11  (Enaxthe. 

Umbels  simple.  Small  creeping  glabrous  plant  with  linear  tufted  entire 

leaves.  Albumen  terete *...■.  12.  Crantzia. 

Umbels  compound.  Fruit-ribs  obtuse ; commissure  of  the  fruit  narrow. 

Seeds  terete 8.  Apium. 


Series  III.  Diplozyg'iae. — Fruit  scarcely  compressed,  densely  covered  with  bristles  pro- 
ceeding from  four  prominent  secondary  ribs  on  each  carpel,  with  single  vittee  under  the  ribs. 
I'rimanj  ribs  inconspicuous. 

Tribe  V.  Caucalineit. — Fruit  subtercte,  or  l ih  rally  bul  slightly,  or  ilorsally  more  largely 


compressed. 

Fruit  glabrous,  globose.  Bracts  none  . 13.*Coriandrum 

Fruit  hirsute  or  setose.  Bracts  pinnate.  Seeds  plane  on  the  inner  face  . . 14  Daucus. 


1.  HYDROCOTYLE,  Linn. 

(From  the  cup-shaped  form  of  the  leaf  of  some  European  species.) 

Calyx-teeth  minute  or  inconspicuous.  Petals  entire,  acute,  valvateor  imbricate. 
Disk  flat,  with  a raised  annular  or  cup-shaped  margin.  Fruit  laterally  com- 
pressed, without  vittfe,  often  didyinous,  carpophore  deciduous  with  the  carpels  or 
persistent ; carpels  with  the  dorsal  rib  prominent,  the  lateral  ribs  concealed  in 
the  commissure,  or  distinct  and  prominent  or  rarely  combined  in  one  prominent 
rib,  the  intermediate  ribs  usually  prominent,  straight,  curved  or  short  and  semi- 
circular; secondary  ribs  very  rarely  conspicuous.  Seed  straight,  laterally 
compressed. — Herbs,  either  prostrate  and  rooting  at  the  nodes  or  erect  and 
annual.  Leaves  either  orbicular,  peltate  or  deeply  cordate  and  entire  or  divided, 
or  euneate  at  the  base  and  divided.  Stipules  scarious,  often  toothed  or  jagged, 
especially  in  the  annual  species.  Flowers  small,  sometimes  unisexual,  in  simple 
umbels  or  also  verticillate  on  the  peduncle  below  the  terminal  umbel,  white  or 
rarely  purplish. 

The  genus  is  dispersed  over  the  warmer  and  temperate  regions  of  the  globe,  most  frequent  in 
moist  situations  or  floating  in  water. — Benth. 

Section’  I.  Euhydrocotyle. — Leaves  orbicular  and  peltate  or  deeply  cordate,  or  divided 
to  the  base  into  3,  o or  more  segments.  Petals  valvate.  Carpels  with  the  intermediate  ribs  alone 
prominent  on  each  side  or  rarely  with  the  lateral  ones  also  distinct  and  prominent. 


Stems  creeping  and  rooting,  at  least  at  the  lower  joints.  Carpophore 
deciduous  with  the  carpels. 

Fruits  more  or  less  didymous,  the  carpels  convex  on  the  sides,  the  dorsal 
edge  obtuse. 

Leaves  orbicular,  peltately  attached  by  the  centre H.  vulgaris. 

Leaves  rounded  or  reniform-cordate  with  a deep  sinus  at  the  insertion  of' 
the  petiole,  crenate  or  lobed  but  not  divided  to  the  base. 

Fruits  nearly  sessile  in  the  head.  Diffuse  plants  with  distinct  flower- 
ing nodes.  Stipules  not  imbricate H.  liirta. 

Fruits  distinctly  pedicellate  in  the  umbel. 

Flowering-stems  ascending  or  erect.  Leaves  more  or  less  hirsute 

and  lobed.  Fruit  1 line  broad 3 . H.  laxiflora. 

Flowering-stems  slender  and  diffuse.  Leaves  glabrous,  scarcely 

lobed.  Fruit  § line  broad  on  long  slender  pedicels 4.  H.  pedicellosa. 

Leaves  divided  to  the  base  into  3 or  5 lobes  5,  H.  tripartita. 


LX.  UMBELLIFEILE. 


715 


Hydroeotyle.] 

Section  II.  Centella. — Leaves  (except  in  H.  asiatica)  cuneate  at  the  base  nr  narrow. 
Petals  imbricate. 

Perennial,  creeping  and  rooting  at  the  nodes.  Leaves  broadly  cordate. 

Carpophore  deciduous  with  the  fruit.  Fruits  obscurely  several-ribbed  (the 

secondary  ribs  sometimes  conspicuous) (1.  H.  asiatica. 

1.  H.  vulgaris  (common),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  iv.  59;  Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
339.  Stems  slender,  creeping  in  mud  or  floating  in  water,  rooting  at  every  node 
and  emitting  from  the  same  point  tufts  of  leaves  and  peduncles.  Leaves  orbicular, 
£ to  lin.  diameter,  or  when  very  luxuriant  twice  that  size,  crenate  or  slightly 
lobed,  peltately  attached  by  the  centre  to  a rather  long  petiole,  with  about  9 or 
when  luxuriant  11  nerves  radiating  from  the  same  point.  Stipules  broad  and 
entire  but  very  soon  worn  away  from  the  rooting  nodes.  Peduncles  shorter  than 
the'  petioles,  either  with  a single  terminal  head  or  umbel  or  with  the  addition  of 
2 or  3 whorls  below  it  of  minute  white  flowers  on  exceedingly  short  pedicels. 
Bracts  small,  scarious.  Petals  valvate,  slightly  induplicate.  Fruit  1J  to  1£  line 
broad,  not  above  1 line  long,  2-ribbed  on  each  side  (the  intermediate  ribs  alone 
prominent,  the  lateral  ones  concealed  in  the  commissure),  the  dorsal  edge  of  the 
carpels  obtuse. — Reichb.  Ic.  FI.  Germ.  t.  1842;  H.  interrupta,  Muehl.;  I)C.  Prod, 
iv.  59;  H.  verticillata,  Thunb.;  Harv.  and  Sond.  FI.  Cap.  ii.  527. 

Hab. : Moreton  Bay  and  other  parts  of  southern  Queensland. 

The  species  is  widely  distributed  over  the  temperate  regions  of  both  hemispheres. — Bentli. 

2.  H.  hirta  (hairy),  R.  Hr.  in  A.  Rich.  Hydroc.  64  ; Bentli.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
339.  Prostrate  or  creeping  and  rooting  at  least  at  the  lower  nodes,  rather 
slender  and  more  or  less  hirsute.  Leaves  orbicular-cordate  or  reniform,  divided 
to  about  J or  f,  rarely  deeper,  into  about  7 broad  crenate  lobes,  usually  from  4-  to 
l|in.  diameter.  Stipules  usually  ciliate  or  fringed.  Peduncles  solitary  or  2 
together,  each  with  a small  head  of  numerous  (10  to  40)  minute  flowers,  sessile  or 
very  shortly  pedicellate.  Bracts  small.  Petals  valvate.  Fruits  not  more  than 
1 line  diameter  and  often  smaller,  very  closely  packed  in  a small  globular  head, 
quite  smooth  or  granular,  each  with  2 prominent  ribs  on  each  side  (the  inter- 
mediate ones),  the  dorsal  edge  of  the  carpels  obtuse. — Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  152. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River  and  other  southern  localities. 

Var.  (?)  acutiloba,  F.  v.  M.  Leaves  divided  to  about  the  middle  into  triangular  more  or  less 
acute  lobes.  Plant  rather  large.  Fruits  very  small  — From  Dawson  River,  F.  v.  Mueller , 
Rockhampton,  Dallachy,  to  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller  and  others. 

Var.  pusilla.  Smaller  and  less  hirsute,  sometimes  nearly  glabrous. — H.  pulchella,  R.  Br.  in 
A.  Rich.  Hydroc.  59  ; DC.  Prod.  iv.  66;  H clegans,  A.  Rich.  Hydroc.  58  ; DC.  Prod.  iv.  66  (with 
deeper  lobed  leaves) ; H.  tasmanica,  Hook.  f.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  vi.  467,  and  FI.  Tasm.  i. 
152  to  32a  ; H.  vagam,  Hook.  f.  in  Hook.  Lond.  Journ.  vi.  468,  and  FI.  Tasm.  i.  153  t.  33a. — 
From  Queensland  to  Tasmania,  including  some  of  Sieber’s  specimens,  n.  14.  The  more  glabrous 
forms  from  more  aquatic  situations. 

The  species  may  not  be  distinct  from  a common  tropical  and  subtropical  one,  which  includes 
H.  rotundifolia,  Roxb.;  Wight,  Ic.  t.  564,  from  tropical  Asia;  H.  sibthorpioicles,  Lam.;  A.  Rich. 
Hydroc.  t.  54  f.  8,  from  the  Mauritius ; H.  Mannii , Hook.  f.  in  Journ.  Linn.  Soc.  vii.  194,  from 
tropical  Africa ; H.  marcliantioides,  Clos  in  Gay,  FI.  Chil.  iii.  67,  from  Chili,  and  some  forms 
usually  referred  to  H.  Bonplandi,  A.  Rich.,  from  the  Andes.  The  common  New  Zealand  H. 
moschata,  Foist.,  is  rather  more  distinct,  but  even  that  might  perhaps  be  included  in  the  same 
series,  and,  if  so,  Forster’s  name  appears  to  have  the  light  of  priority  for  the  collective 
species. — Bentli. 

H.  intertextu,  R.  Br.;  A.  Rich.  Hydroc.  63;  DC.  Prod.  iv.  66,  from  the  single  small  specimen  I 
have  seen,  would  appear  to  be  one  of  the  forms  of  IT.  hirta,  with  rather  longer  styles.  A.  Richard 
describes  the  carpophore  as  persistent,  a character  which  the  specimen  1 saw  did  not  show. 
IT.  Gaudichaudiana , DC.  Prod.  iv.  67.  only  known  to  me  by  the  diagnosis  given,  is  again 
probably  one  of  the  forms  of  II.  hirta.  Ilenth. 

3.  H.  laxiflora  (flowers  loose  in  the  umbel),  DC.  Prod.  iv.  61  ; lienlli.  FL. 
Austr.  iii.  340.  Stems  creeping  and  rooting  like  the  allied  species,  but  the 
flowering  branches  often  ascending  or  erect  to  the  length  of  6in.  or  even  more, 
hirsute  as  well  as  the  leaves  with  spreading  hairs.  Leaves  orbicular-cordate, 


ne 


lx.  umbelLiEertE. 


[. Ifydrocotyle . 


shortly  and  broadly  5 to  11-lobed  and  crenate,  rarely  above  lin.  diameter. 
Stipules  entire  or  slightly  fringed-ciliate.  Peduncles  short  or  long,  each  with  a 
globular  umbel  of  30  to  40  or  even  more  flowers.  Bracts  numerous,  small  and 
narrow.  Pedicels  varying  from  i line  to  8 lines  long,  when  long  usually  with 
infertile  flowers.  Petals  valvate.  Styles  long.  Fruit  about  1 line  broad  or 
rather  more,  smooth  or  granular,  with  2 prominent  ribs  (the  intermediate  ones) 
on  each  side,  the  dorsal  edge  of  the  carpels  obtuse. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  179  ; 
H.  densi  flora,  DC.  Prod.  iv.  07  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  180. 

Hab.:  Dawson  and  Burnett  Rivers,  !•'.  v.  Mueller. 

Var.  ? minor.  Flowers  and  fruits  very  much  smaller. — Moreton  Bay,  C.  Stuart. 

De  Candolle  had  already  observed  the  great  similarity  between  his  II.  laxijlora  and  H. 
demiflora , which  appear  to  be  always  found  growing  together,  and  F.  v.  Mueller,  Fragm.  iv. 
ISO,  seems  to  have  suspected  dimorphism.  An  observation  of  numerous  specimens  seems  to  show 
that  the  differences  are  those  of  semisexual  dimorphism.  In  the  long-pedicelled  umbels  the 
petals  are  more  expanded,  the  stamens  longer,  and  the  ovary  enlarges  but  little,  and  ultimately 
withers  without  forming  good  seed.  I have  only  found  ripe  fruits  in  the  dense  umbels,  in  which 
the  pedicels  rarely  attain  1 line.  In  these  the  petals  open  less  freely,  sometimes  cohering  till 
they  fall,  and  the  stamens  are  shorter.  I have  found  both  kinds  of  umbels  on  the  same 
specimen. — Benth. 

4.  H.  pedicellosa  (pedicels  prominent),  F.  v.  M.  Fra</m . iv.  182;  Benth. 
FI.  Auxtr.  tii.  341.  Stems  slender,  slightly  pubescent  or  nearly  glabrous. 
Leaves  orbicular-cordate  or  reniform,  crenate,  scarcely  lobed,  thin,  glabrous  or 
sparingly  pubescent,  often  above  lin.  diameter.  Stipules  broad,  entire. 
Peduncles  filiform,  with  a loose  umbel  of  10  to  30  very  small  flowers,  on  filiform 
pedicels  varying  from  1 to  3 lines  in  length.  Bracts  all  broad,  short,  and 
scarious.  Ovary  at  the  time  of  flowering  not  J line  long  and  broad.  Petals 
valvate,  glandular.  Styles  rather  long.  Fruits  about  f line  broad,  smooth  or 
granular,  with  2 scarcely  prominent  ribs  on  each  side. 

Hub.:  Southern  localities. 

5.  H.  tripartita  (leaf  three-partite),  H.  Br.  in  A.  Rich.  Hydroc.  69,  t.  61, 
./'.  25  ; Benth.  FI.  Anstr.  iii.  341.  Small  and  very  slender,  sometimes  densely 
matted,  or  the  filiform  stems  extending  to  several  inches,  glabrous  or  sprinkled 
with  a few  hairs.  Leaves  divided  to  the  petiole  into  3 to  5 cuneate  entire  or 
2 or  3-tootlied  segments,  rarely  above  3 lines  long,  and  sometimes  not  li  line. 
Stipules  entire.  Peduncles  filiform,  shorter  than  the  leaves,  each  with  an  umbel 
or  head  of  3 to  6 or  rarely  more  small  flowers  nearly  sessile.  Fruits  § line 
diameter,  with  2 slightly  prominent  ribs  on  each  side,  smooth  or  granular ; 
carpels  convex  on  the  sides,  the  dorsal  edge  obtuse. — DC.  Prod.  iv.  65. 

Hab.:  Burnett  River  and  other  southern  localities. 

6.  II.  asiatica  (Asiatic),  Linn.;  DC.  Prod.  iv.  62  ; Benth.  FI.  Auxtr.  iii. 
841.  A creeping  perennial,  rooting  at  the  nodes,  and  sometimes  half- floating. 
Leaves  broadly  cordate,  orbicular  or  almost  reniform,  entire  crenate  or  sinuate 
toothed,  1 to  lHu.  diameter,  glabrous  or  pubescent,  on  petioles  varying  very 
much  in  length.  Stipules  broad,  usually  entire.  Flowers  3 or  4 in  little  heads 
or  umbels,  on  peduncles  varying  much  in  length  or  almost  sessile.  Two  outer 
bracts  under  the  umbel  broad  and  scarious  like  the  stipules,  the  inner  ones  small 
and  narrow.  Petals  broad  and  thin,  much  imbricated  in  the  bud.  Fruit  nearly 
2 lines  diameter,  laterally  compressed,  but  the  dorsal  edges  obtuse,  showing  when 
young  the  secondary  as  well  as  the  primary  ribs,  when  ripe  obscurely  4 to 
6-ribbed  on  each  side  and  somewhat  reticulate. — Bunge  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  283  ; 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  152  ; Wight,  Ic.  t.  565  ; H.  repanda,  Pers.;  DC.  Prod.  iv. 
62  ; H.  eordifolia,  Hook.  f.  in  Hook.  Ic.  t.  308. 

Hab.:  A very  common  weed  in  Queensland. 

The  species  is  also  in  New  Zealand,  and  generally  distributed  over  tropical  and  subtropical 
Asia,  Africa,  and  America. 


LX.  UMBELLIFERiE. 


Ill 


2.  TRACHYMENE,  Rudge. 

(Alluding  to  the  rough  channels  of  the  fruit.) 

(Didiscus,  DC.;  Dimetopia,  DC.;  Pritzelia,  IValp.;  Huegelia,  Reich.;  Cesatia,  Endl.; 

Hemicarpus,  F.  v.  M.) 

Calyx-teeth  minute  or  inconspicuous  or  rarely  1 or  2 rather  longer  and  subulate. 
Petals  entire,  obtuse  or  nearly  so,  much  imbricate.  Disk  fiat  or  with  slightly 
prominent  margins  or  scarcely  any.  Fruit  laterally  compressed,  usually  flat, 
notched  at  the  base,  without  vittae  ; carpophore  persistent,  undivided  ; carpels 
laterally  compressed,  the  dorsal  rib  prominent,  rarely  winged,  lateral  ones  con- 
cealed in  the  narrow  commissure,  intermediate  ribs  semicircular,  shorter  than  the 
fruit,  enclosing  as  it  were  an  inner  disk.  Seed  straight,  laterally  compressed. — 
Herbs  either  annual,  biennial,  or  with  a perennial  stock,  more  or  less  hirsute  or 
rarely  glabrous.  Leaves  ternately  divided  or  rarely  toothed  only,  without 
stipules.  Flowers  white  or  blue,  in  simple  umbels,  on  terminal  or  leaf- opposed 
peduncles.  Involucre  of  linear  bracts  usually  shortly  united  at  the  base.  Fruits 
usually  tubercular  murieate  or  villous,  one  carpel  often  differently  or  less  muricate 
than  the  other  or  abortive. 

Besides  the  Australian  species,  which  are  endemic,  there  is  one  from  New  Caledonia  and  one 
from  Borneo. — Benth. 

Small  annuals.  Leaves  divided.  Flowers  few  in  the  umbels.  Fruit  equally 

covered  with  long  ciliate  bristles 1.  X.  cyanopetala. 

Coarse  erect  annuals  or  biennials.  Leaves  divided  or  lobed.  Flowers 
numerous  in  the  umbel.  Fruit  not  winged. 

Involucral  bracts  much  shorter  than  the  pedicels.  Flowers  small.  Leaves 
divided.  Carpels  both  perfect  or  one  abortive. 

More  or  less  hirsute,  not  glaucous 2.  T.  australis. 

Very  glabrous  and  glaucous 3.  X.  glaucifalia. 

Involucral  bracts  short.  Leaves  deeply  3-lobed,  with  oblong-cuneate  lobes. 

One  carpel  abortive 4.  X.  glandulosa. 

Rootstock  perennial,  with  elongated  branching  stems.  Leaves  deeply 
divided,  both  carpels  usually  perfect. 

Stems  erect,  rigid.  Leaves  mostly  radical  from  the  base 5.  X.  incisa. 

Stems  weak,  procumbent,  leafy 6.  X.  procumbent. 

1.  T.  cyanopetala  (petals  blue),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  848.  Stem  and 
foliage  glabrous  or  nearly  so.  Leaves  deeply  8 or  5-lobed,  with  linear  or  cuneate 
entire  or  2 or  3-lobed  divisions.  Peduncles  short.  Involucre  of  4 or  5 bracts. 
Flowers  in  the  umbels  3 to  6,  on  very  short  pedicels.  Petals  blue.  Fruits 
densely  covered  with  soft  ciliolate  bristles,  and  usually  dense  on  both  carpels, 
rarely  one  carpel  almost  bare. — Dimetopia  cyanopetala,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  231. 

Hab.:  Darling  Downs. 

2.  T.  australis  (Australian),  Benth.  hi.  Austr.  iii.  349.  Stems  14  to  2ft. 
high.  Root  fusiform.  Petioles  and  leaves  hairy  but  on  the  latter  the  hairs  are 
deciduous,  or  the  whole  plant  sometimes  nearly  glabrous.  Segments  of  the 
cauline  leaves  linear.  Involucre  of  several  narrow  linear  bracts.  Petals  large, 
obovate,  entire.  Fruit  scabrous,  of  2 orbicular  carpels. — Did  incus  pilosus,  Benth. 
in  Hueg.  Enum.  54  ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  154  ; Hook.  Ic.  t.  307  ; Dimetopia 
anisocarpa  and  D.  <j  rand  is,  Turcz  in  Bull.  Mosc.  1849,  ii.  29  ; Duliscus  aniso- 
carpus  and  D.  grandis,  F.  v.  M.  in  Proc.  Roy.  Soc.  Tasm.  iii.  238. 

Hab.:  Newcastle  Range,  F.  v.  Mueller  : inland  localities. 

3.  T.  glaucifolia  (leaves  glaucous),  Benth.  hi.  Austr.  iii.  850;  F.  r.  M. 
Fragm.  ix.  47.  Apparently  an  annual  or  biennial,  the  whole  plant  perfectly 
glabrous  and,  according  to  F.  v.  Mueller,  glaucous-pruinose  when  fresh.  Leaves 
shortly  petiolate,  deeply  3 or  almost  5-lobed,  with  linear  or  cuneate  entire  or 
3-lobed  divisions.  Flowers  blue. — Di-discus  glaucifolius,  F.  v.  M.  in  Linmea,  xxv. 
395. 

Hab.:  Inland  localities. 


718 


LX.  UMBELLIFERiE. 


[Trachynicne. 


4.  T.  glandulosa  (hairs  glandular),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  850.  Erect  and 
apparently  annual  or  biennial,  hirsute  with  short  glandular  hairs.  Leaves  shortly 
petiolate,  deeply  divided  (but  not  to  the  base)  into  8 oblong-cuneate  rather  broad 
coarsely  toothed  or  incised  lobes.  Peduncles  long,  glandular-hirsute.  Flowers 
small,  in  umbels  of  about  Ain.  diameter.  Involucral  bracts  shorter  than  the 
pedicels,  united  at  the  base.  Calyx-teeth  obsolete.  Disk  broad,  rather  thick. 
Fruit  reduced  by  abortion  to  a single  carpel,  about  2 lines  long  and  almost  as 
broad,  granular-tuberculate,  not  winged. — Didiscm  t/latidulosus,  F.  v.  M.  in  Proc. 
Roy.  Soc.  Tasm.  iii.  288. 

Hab.:  Gulf  of  Carpentaria,  /• . v.  Mueller. 

5.  T.  incisa  (leaves  much  divided),  lludye  in  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  x.  800  t.  21  ; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  350.  Glabrous  or  rarely  with  a few  long  hairs  on  the  radical 
leaves.  Stems  from  a thick  perennial  rootstock,  erect,  thin  but  rigid,  1 to  2ft. 
high.  Leaves  chiefly  radical  or  on  the  lower  part  of  the  stem,  on  long  petioles, 
not  large,  8 or  5-partite,  the  segments  often  again  twice  trifid  with  narrow  acute 
lobes,  the  upper  leaves  few  small  and  less  divided.  Peduncles  long.  Bracts 
much  shorter  than  the  pedicels.  ' Flowers  small.  Calyx-teeth  more  distinct  than 
in  the  preceding  species.  Disk  very  prominent.  Fruit  ripening  both  carpels, 
about  2 lines  broad,  obtusely  muricate. — Didiscus  albiflorus , DC.  Prod.  iv.  72. 

Hab.:  Near  Brisbane  ; Stanthovpe. 

Var.  pilose.  Sprinkled  with  a few  Ion"  hairs  ; umbels  rather  larger. 

6.  T.  procumbens  (procumbent),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  350.  Stems  from  a 
perennial  rootstock  elongated,  procumbent  or  ascending,  slender,  quite  glabrous 
or  slightly  glandular-pubescent.  Leaves  of  the  stem  as  well  as  the  lower  ones  on 
slender  petioles,  tripartite,  each  segment  again  deeply  divided  into  narrow-cuneate 
or  lanceolate  toothed  or  incised  lobes,  mostly  acute,  with  a few  glandular  hairs  at 
the  base  and  at  the  summit  of  the  petiole,  otherwise  usually  glabrous.  Peduncles 
long  and  slender.  Umbels  rarely  above  Ain.  diameter  with  numerous  small 
flowers  on  filiform  pedicels  of  above  2 lines.  Involucral  bracts  setaceous,  much 
shorter  than  the  pedicels.  Calyx-teeth  minutely  prominent.  Disk  shortly  cup- 
shaped. Fruits  usually  ripening  both  carpels,  about  1A  line  broad,  smooth  or 
tubercular  muricate. — Didiscus  procumbens,  F.  v.  M.  in  Proc.  Roy.  Soc.  Tasm.  iii. 
287. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  P.ivCr,  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller,  Leichhardt ; Itockinghani  Bay,  ./. 
Deillachy  (F.  v.  M.),  Mrs.  Dietrich  ; Lizard  Island,  M'GilUcrag. 


3.  SIEBERA,  Reichb. 

(After  F.  W.  Sieber.) 

(Traehymene,  DC.,  not  of  Rudge  : Fischera,  Spreng.  (partly),  Sin.;  Platysaee,  Bunge  : 
Platycarpidium,  F.  v.  Mueller.) 

Calyx-teeth  small  but  usually  conspicuous.  Petals  entire,  induplicate-valvate 
or  slightly  imbricate,  concave,  with  the  end  indexed,  the  midrib  prominent 
inside,  tbe  bud  prominently  5-angled.  Disk  flat  and  thick,  or  scarcely  any 
besides  the  thick  conical  base  of  the  styles.  Fruit  laterally  compressed,  slightly 
notched  at  the  base,  without  vittae  ; carpophore  persistent ; carpels  more  or  less 
turgid,  but  flattened  at  the  commissure,  the  dorsal  rib  usually  prominent,  the 
lateral  ones  concealed  in  or  slightly  prominent  at  the  narrow  commissure,  the 
intermediate  ones  usually  faint.  Seed  more  or  less  compressed  but  often  not 
filling  the  cavity. — Rigid  herbs  with  a perennial  almost  woody  stock  and  virgate 
branches,  or  heath-like  shrubs,  glabrous  or  slightly  glandular-pubescent.  Leaves 
all  entire  or  tbe  lower  ones  divided  or  all  reduced  to  small  scales,  without  stipules. 
Umbels  compound  or  rarely  simple,  terminal.  Involucral  bracts  small.  Flowers 
small,  white.  Fruit  small.  . 

The  genus  is  confined  to  Australia. 


Siebera .]  LX.  UMBELLIFER^E.  7l9 

Large  leafy  shrub.  Fruits  very  Hat,  with  acute  edges 1.  .S',  valida. 

Leafy  shrubs.  Carpels  wholly  turgid  except  a narrow  furrow  at  the  com- 
missure. 

Leaves  narrow-linear  or  subulate,  all  entire. 

Leaves  short.  Stems  short  and  diffuse,  usually  glandular-pubescent  . 2.  .S',  ericoides. 

Leaves  mostly  Jin.  or  more.  Stems  .ascending  or  erect,  usually  quite 

glabrous 3.  .S'.  linearifolia. 

Leaves  orbicular,  obovate,  ovate  or  lanceolate,  all  entire 4.  .S'.  Billardieri. 


1..  S.  valida  (of  sturdy  habit),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  855.  A tall  shrub. 
Leaves  linear  or  linear-lanceolate,  narrowed  at  both  ends,  1 to  2in.  long, 
coriaceous,  faintly  3-nerved.  Umbels  compound,  numerous,  forming  a broad 
terminal  panicle  ; rays  usually  3 or  4,  the  central  one  very  short,  all  hearing 
partial  umbels,  sometimes  again  compound.  Involucral  bracts  few  and  small. 
Calyx-teeth  shortly  prominent.  Petals  sometimes  slightly  imbricate.  Fruits 
very  flat,  about  3 lines  broad  and  2 lines  long,  carpels  not  turgid,  with  the  dorsal 
edge  acute,  the  intermediate  curved  ribs  slightly  raised. — Plati/carpidinm  ralidnw, 
F.  v.  M.  in  Hook.  Ivew  Journ.  ix.  310  ; Platysace  valida,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  i.  232. 

Hab.:  Burdekin  River,  F.  v.  Mueller ; Bowen  River.  Bowman  ; Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy. 


2.  S.  ericoides  (Heath-like),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  356.  A small,  much- 
branched,  divaricate  or  diffuse  shrub,  glabrous  or  more  frequently  glandular- 
pubescent  towards  the  ends  of  the  branches.  Leaves  all  entire,  linear  or  subulate, 
acute,  more  spreading  than  in  S.  linear) folia,  rarely  exceeding  Ain.  and  mostly 
shorter.  Umbels  compound,  but  small  and  compact,  very  shortly  pedunculate, 
with  few  rays.  Involucral  bracts  short,  linear.  Fruit  nearly  as  in  S.  linearifolia , 
but  less  rugose  or  quite  smooth,  the  carpels  usually  more  turgid  and  often 
furrowed  at  the  intermediate  rib,  besides  the  commissural  furrow. — -Trachymene 
ericoides,  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  iv.  738  ; T.  tenuis  and  T subrelutina,  DC.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Island,  M'Gillivray. 

Var.  thy  mi  folia , A.  Cunn.  Leaves  small  (not  above  2 lines  long),  oblong-linear  or  lanceolate, 
acute,  with  recurved  margins. — Barren  spots,  forest  land,  Moreton  Bay.  A.  Cunningham. 

The  species  is  often  scarcely  to  be  distinguished  from  S.  linearifolia.  -Benth. 

3.  S.  linearifolia  (leaves  linear),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  356.  Shrubby  and 
glabrous  with  slender  branches,  decumbent,  ascending,  or  erect.  Leaves  all 
entire,  narrow-linear  or  subulate,  acute,  mostly  A to  lin.  long.  Umbels  com- 
pound, on  slender  peduncles,  usually  exceeding  the  last  leaves,  with  3 or  4 or 
rarely  more  slender  rays.  Involucral  bracts  small,  linear.  Calyx-teeth  shortly 
prominent.  Disk  broad  with  a thickened  margin.  Fruit  about  1 line  long  and 
broad,  more  or  less  rugose,  the  ribs  scarcely  conspicuous  ; carpels  turgid  with 
a broad  obtuse  back,  leaving  only  a narrow  groove  at  the  commissure. — Azorella 
linearifolia,  Cav.  Ic.  v.  57  t.  485  ; Trachymene  linearis,  Spreng.;  DC.  Prod.  iv. 
73  ; Fischer  a linearis,  Sm.  in  Rees  Cycl.  Suppl. 

Hab  : Fraser’s  and  Moreton  Islands  and  Stanthoipe. 

The  species  passes  almost  into  S.  ericifolia  on  the  one  hand  and  the  narrow-leaved  varieties 
of  ,S'.  Billardieri  on  the  other. — Benth. 

4.  S.  Billardieri  (after  J.  .T.  Labillardiere),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  856.  A 
shrub,  either  low  and  diffuse  or  erect  and  attaining  2 or  3ft.,  glabrous  or  with 
minutely  pubescent  branches.  Leaves  orbicular,  obovate,  ovate,  elliptical, 
cuneate,  or  broadly  or  narrow-lanceolate,  acute  or  obtuse,  narrowed  at  the  base 
and  almost  petiolate  or  closely  sessile  and  rounded  at  the  base,  mostly  under  Ain. 
long  when  broad  and  obtuse,  often  above  lin.  when  narrow  and  acute.  Umbels 
compound,  sessile  or  pedunculate,  but  the  peduncles  rarely  long ; rays  often 
numerous  but  sometimes  few.  Involucral  bracts  linear,  small,  or  rarely  as  long 
as  the  rays.  Fruit  about  1 line  long  and  broad,  more  or  less  tubercular  or 


720 


-LX.  UMBELLIFER^E. 


[Siebera. 


rugose,  the  ribs  scarcely  conspicuous,  or  both  the  dorsal  and  intermediate  ones 
prominent,  or  the  latter  depressed.  Carpels  turgid,  leaving  a narrow  furrow 
between  them  at  the  commissure. 

Hab.:  Various  southern  localities. 

A most  variable  species  as  to  the  form  of  the  leaves,  and  might  indeed  include  the  preceding 
two  species. — Benth. 

4.  XANTHOSIA,  Rudge. 

(From  the  yellow-coloured  hairs  which  clothe  some  species.) 

(Leucolaena,  R.  Br.:  Schcenolrena,  Bunge;  l’entapeltis,  Bunge.) 

Calyx- lobes  orbicular  ovate  or  lanceolate,  peltate  cordate  or  not  attached  by 
the  whole  of  the  base.  Petals  with  an  induplicate  point  and  reduplicate  margins, 
slightly  imbricate  or  almost  valvate.  Disk  of  2 prominent  lobes  or  glands  at  the 
back  of  the  styles  or  rarely  almost  Hat.  Fruit  laterally  compressed,  notched  at 
the  base  with  rounded  auricles,  without  vittse,  the  carpophore  persistent,  the  dorsal 
edge  of  the  carpels  obtuse,  the  primary  and  often  some  oi  the  secondary  ribs 
prominent  and  curved  at  the  base.  Seed  somewhat  compressed. — Herbs  or  small 
shrubs,  diffuse  or  decumbent  at  the  base  or  erect,  often  clothed  with  soft  long 
hairs  mixed  with  a stellate  tomentum.  Leaves  toothed,  lobed  or  ternately 
divided.  Umbels  usually  compound,  the  partial  ones  with  two  or  three  bracts 
and  several  almost  sessile  flowers,  the  general  one  of  3 or  4 rays  and  as  many 
bracts,  but  sometimes  the  whole  umbel  reduced  to  very  few  or  to  a single  flower. 

The  genus  is  confined  to  Australia. 

1.  X.  pilosa  (hairy),  Rudye  in  Tram.  Linn.  Soc.  x.  301  t.  22,/.  1 ; Benth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  360.  An  erect  or  more  frequently  diffuse  or  procumbent,  much 
branched,  leafy  shrub,  of  1 to  2ft.,  copiously  clothed  with  rather  long  hairs 
intermixed  with  a brown  stellate  tomentum,  or  very  rarely  in  mountain  situations 
becoming  almost  glabrous.  Leaves  cuneate,  obovate,  oblong,  lanceolate  or 
broadly  ovate,  coarsely  sinuate-toothed,  3 or  5-lobed  or  rarely  3-partite,  the 
central  lobe  always  longer  than  the  lateral  ones,  rarely  exceeding  lin.,  the  petiole 
short,  dilated  and  ciliate  at  the  base,  but  without  real  stipules.  Peduncles 
usually  2 together  at  the  nodes,  very  short  or  slender  and  nearly  as  long  as  the 
leaves,  each  usually  with  2 flowers,  more  rarely  3 or  only  1,  with  2 or  3 small 
narrow  bracts  forming  a general  involucre  at  the  base  of  the  short  pedicels  or 
rays,  and  2 or  3 oblong-lanceolate  bracts  of  2 or  3 lines,  forming  a partial 
involucre  under  each  flower.  Calyx-lobes  rather  thickened  at  the  base,  but 
neither  cordate  nor  peltate.  Petals  narrow,  with  a long  inflexed  point.  Disk- 
lobes  thick,  pubescent.  Fruit  rather  above  1 line  long  and  broad,  the  inter- 
mediate and  secondary  ribs  prominent,  the  lateral  ones  scarcely  distinct  from  the 
commissure. — A',  nwntana,  Sieb.  in  DC.  Prod.  iv.  74  ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  155  ; 
X.  hirsuta,  DC.  Prod.  iv.  74  ; Leucoltena  pannosa,  Benth.  in  Hueg.  Enum.  55 
(more  densely  villous,  with  longer  leaves). 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Moreton  Bay  and  some  few  other  southern  localities. 

One-flowered  and  two-flowered  involucres,  on  which  two  species  have  been  frequently  distin- 
guished, occur  sometimes  on  the  same  specimens.  The  glabrous  specimens,  from  mountain 
situations,  appear  at  first  sight  very  distinct,  but  I can  find  no  other  difference  than  the  want 
of  hairs. — Benth. 

5.  ACTINOTUS,  Labill. 

(Involucre  rayed.) 

(Eriocalia,  8m.;  Holotome,  Until.;  Hemiphues,  Hook,  /.y 

Calyx-limb  distinct,  campanulate  or  open,  truncate  or  5-lobed.  Petals  5, 
unguiculate,  spathulate  or  orbicular-concave,  imbricate  in  the  bud,  or  none. 
Disk-lobes  or  glands  at  the  back  of  the  styles,  often  not  quite  at  the  base.  Ovary 


LX.  tJMBELLIFER^E. 


721 


Actinotw .*.] 


with  a single  cell  and  ovale  ; styles  2,  often  united  at  the  base.  Fruit  ovate,  of  a 
single  carpel,  crowned  by  the  calyx-limb,  compressed  from  front  to  back,  5-ribbed, 
one  face  (the  broad  commissure  ?)  nearly  flat  with  1 rib,  the  other  (the  back  ?) 
convex  with  2 ribs,  and  1 rib  at  or  near  each  margin.  Vittae  none.  Seed  filling 
the  cavity. — Herbs,  either  annual  or  with  a perennial  rootstock  or  woody  or  tufted 
base.  Leaves  toothed  or  ternately  divided.  Umbels  simple,  surrounded  by  a 
radiating  involucre  of  herbaceous  or  coloured  and  often  very  tomento.se  or  woolly 
bracts  exceeding  the  flowers.  Flowers  often  very  numerous,  all  with  apparently 
perfect  stamens  and  styles,  but  the  outer  ones  often  males  by  the  abortion  of  the 
ovary,  rarely  all  perfect. 

The  genus  is  confined  to  Australia.  The  characters  upon  which  it  has  been  divided  appear  to 
me  to  be  too  artificial  and  too  little  in  correlation  with  each  other  to  serve  even  for  sections. — 
Benth. 


Stems  branched,  more  or  less  leafy.  Umbels  pedunculate. 

Involucres  very  woolly  or  hirsute,  coloured,  1 to  3in.  diameter.  Tall  erect 
plants.  Leaves  once  or  twice  tripartite.  Densely  tomentose.  Calyx  5- 
lobed.  Petals  none 1.  A.  Helianthi. 

Involucres  under  Jin.  diameter.  Stems  diffuse  or  ascending.  Leaves  - 

divided,  white  underneath.  Calyx  a-lobed.  Petals  none 2.  A.  minor. 

Involucres  with  about  9 bracts,  very  shortly  pedunculate.  Flowers  nearly 

all  fertile.  Petals  none.  Fruit  ovate-orbicular  ; margins  densely  ciliate  . 3.  A.  Gibbonm. 


1.  A.  Helianthi  (Sunflower-like),  Labill.  ' PI.  Nor.  Holl.  i.  67  t. 

92;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  867.  Flannel  Flower.  Erect,  apparently 

perennial,  1 to  2ft.  high,  covered  with  a soft  dense  almost  floccose  or 
woolly  tomentum,  rarely  wearing  off  from  the  upper  side  of  the  leaves. 
Leaves  twice  3-partite,  with  linear  or  oblong-linear  mostly  obtuse  seg- 
ments, entire  or  again  2 or  3-lobed.  Umbels  dense,  on  long  stout  peduncles. 
Involucre  radiating  to  a diameter  of  2 or  4in .,  consisting  of  10  to  18 
coloured  softly  tomentose  bracts.  Flowers  on  filiform  pedicels  of  1J  to  2 lines, 
but  so  numerous  as  to  form  a dense  head  of  Jin.  to  fin.  diameter,  the  outer  ones 
all  males,  the  central  ones  perfect,  both  in  numerous  rows.  Calyx-rim  hairy, 
transparent,  about  J line  long,  deeply  divided  into  obtuse  linear  lobes.  Petals 
none.  Disk-lobes  oblong,  gland-like,  adnate  to  the  entire  base  of  the  style. 
Fruit  about  2 lines  long,  covered  with  long  silky  hairs. — Bot.  Reg.  t.  654  ; DC. 
Prod.  iv.  83  ; Eriocalia  major,  Sm.  Exot.  Bot.  ii.  37  t.  38. 

Hab.:  Moreton  Bay,  F.  v.  Mueller : One-tree  Hill,  Taylor’s  Range,  and  Stanthorpe. 

2.  A.  minor  (smaller),  DC.  Prod.  iv.  83  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  368.  The 
smaller  Flannel  Flower.  Stems  from  a perennial  base,  long  and  slender,  diffuse 
or  ascending,  glabrous  or  slightly  tomentose  or  rarely  silky-hairy.  Leaves  small, 
on  short  petioles,  3-partite,  with  cuneate  or  linear  segments  usually  3 to  4 lines 
long,  entire  or  2 or  3-lobed,  glabrous  above,  white-tomentose  underneath,  rarely 
silky-hairy.  Umbels  small,  on  long  slender  peduncles.  Involucre  radiating  to 
about  Jin.  diameter,  the  bracts  lanceolate,  acute,  densely  white-tomentose  on  the 
upper  side,  glabrous  on  the  back,  at  least  along  the  centre.  Flowers  very  nume- 
rous, the  males  in  several  rows  at  the  circumference,  the  perfect  ones  in  the 
centre,  all  on  short  very  hairy  pedicels.  Calyx-limb  deeply  divided  into  acute 
lobes.  Petals  none.  Disk-lobes  sessile,  with  the  styles  between  them  distinct 
from  the  base.  Fruit  about  1 line  long,  hairy. — Eriocalia  minor,  Sm.  Exot.  Bot. 
ii.  39  t.  79. 

Hab.:  N.S.W.  border. 


3.  A.  Gibbonsii  (after  Win.  Sydney  Gibbons),  F.  r.  M.  Frat/m.  vi.  23.  A 
weak  annual  with  decumbent  or  adscendent  steins  1ft.  or  more  long,  floxuose, 
simple  or  little  branched.  Leaves  rhomboid  or  cuneate  in  outline,  deeply  divided 


722 


LX.  UMBELLIFEJELE. 


Artinotus. 


into  8 lobes,  or  2,  3 or  more  lobes.  Umbels  4 to  6 lines  diameter,  containing  30 
or  fewer  nearly  all  fertile  apetalous  flowers.  Calyx-lobes  ciliate,  about  \ line  long. 
Fruit  about  1 line  long,  blackish,  puberulous,  margin  white,  ciliate. 

Hab.:  Stanthorpe. 

This  species  Mueller  considered  to  differ  front  .4.  minor  principally  in  being  an  annual. 


G.  ERYNGIUM,  Linn. 

(From  a name  of  Dioscorides.) 

Calyx-lobes  rigid,  acute  or  pungent-pointed.  Petals  erect,  with  reduplicate  or 
recurved  margins  and  a long  induplicate  point,  scarcely  imbricate  in  the  bud. 
Disk  with  a thick  raised  margin  encircling  the  styles.  Fruit  obovoid  or  ovoid, 
scarcely  compressed,  the  ribs  inconspicuous,  without  vittfe.  Carpophore  deci- 
duous.— Herbs  with  prickly  leaves  and  involucres.  Flowers  in  compact  spikes  or 
heads,  with  a bract  under  each  flower,  the  outer  ones  and  sometimes  some  of  the 
inner  ones  much  longer  than  the  dowers,  rigid  and  pungent-pointed.  Calyx- 
tube  covered  with  transparent,  acuminate  or  obtuse,  flat  or  vesicular  scales. 

The  genus  is  spread  over  the  greater  part  of  the  warm  and  temperate  regions  of  the  globe,  the 
species  most  abundant  and  most  varied  in  S.  America  Of  the  4 Australian  species,  1 is  also  in 
Chili,  another  extends  to  New  Zealand,  the  remaining  2 appear  to  be  endemic. — Benth. 

Some  of  the  species  of  this  genus  have  been  suspected  of  poisoning  stock. 


Leaves  pinnately  toothed,  lobed,  or  divided,  the  radical  ones  narrow. 

Point  of  the  petals  jagged  or  ciliate. 

Flower  heads  ovoid  or  globular. 

Stems  erect,  or  rarely  shortly  decumbent  at  the  base 1.  E.  rostratum. 

Stems  prostrate,  resembling  stolons  but  not  rooting 2.  E.  vesicitlosum. 

Flower-heads  oblong  or  cylindrical 3.  E.  plantagineum. 

Radical  leaves  obovate  or  oblong,  toothed  or  lobed.  Stem-leaves  opposite, 
short,  divaricately  lobed.  Stems  dichotomous.  Point  of  the  petals 
obtuse,  entire 4.  E.  expansum. 


1.  E.  rostratum  (beaked).  Car.  lc.  PI.  vi.  35  t.  552  ; Bcntli.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
370.  Stems  erect,  1 to  2ft.  high,  the  lower  branches  sometimes  alternate,  but 
more  frequently  the  branches  2,  3,  or  4 together,  with  a peduncle  in  the  fork. 
Radicle  leaves  elongated,  usually  linear,  pinnatifid,  with  entire  or  pinnatifid 
linear-pungent  lobes,  but  sometimes  the  rhachis  broader-linear,  and  the  lobes 
reduced  to  teeth,  or  the  rhachis  very  narrow  with  very  few  distant  narrow  lobes, 
or  in  wet  places  the  leaves  quite  entire,  grass-like,  Gin.  long,  and  marked  with 
raised  transverse  lines  so  as  to  appear  jointed.  Stem-leaves  only  under  the 
peduncles  or  branches,  short,  once  or  twice  pinnatifid,  and  very  rigid  and 
pungent.  Flower-heads  ovoid-globose.  Bracts  very  rigid  and  pungent,  linear  or 
linear-lanceolate,  the  outer  ones  and  sometimes  a few  of  the  inner  ones  A to  lin. 
long,  the  others  smaller,  and  some  not  exceeding  the  flowers.  Calyx-tube  densely 
covered  with  linear  obtuse  scales  or  vesicles.  Inflected  point  of  the  petals  ciliate- 
denticulate  or  jagged. — DC.  Prod.  iv.  89  ; E.  orinttm,  A.  Cunn.  in  Field, 
N.  S.  Wales,  358  ; Schlecht.  Linntea,  xx.  622  ; DC.  Prod.  iv.  89  ; E.  anf/usti- 
foliuin,  DC.  Prod.  iv.  95  (from  the  diagnosis  given)  ; /•.'.  pinnatifulum  and  E.  totra- 
cephalum,  Bunge  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  293. 

Hab.:  Common  in  inland  localities. 

The  species  is  found  also  in  extratropicai  South  America.  It  is  exceedingly  variable  in  size> 
number  of  heads,  and  degree  of  division  of  the  leaves.  In  some  vigorous  specimens  the  heads 
are  Jin.  or  rather  more  in  diameter,  without  the  involucral  bracts,  which  are  1 to  l£in.  long,  and 
some  of  them  with  a few  bristly  lobes.  In  others  the  heads  are  few  and  small,  and  but  few  of 
the  bracts  attain  4in.  In  general,  in  arid  situations  the  leaves  are  more  divided  with  narrower 
more  rigid  lobes,  and  in  wet  situations  either  entire  or  simply  pinnatifid. — Benth. 

Yar.  subdecumbens.  Radical  leaves  Gin.  to  lft.  long,  linear,  entire,  or  with  a few  linear  lobes. 
Stems  short,  sometimes  decumbent,  almost  as  in  E.  vesiculosum. — A form  on  the  Darling  Downs 
appears  to  belong  to  this  variety. 


Eri/nr/inm.] 


LX.  UMBELLIFERjE. 


72  8 


2.  E.  vesiculosum  (bladdery),  Labill.  PI.  Xor.  Hull.  i.  73  t.  98  ; lienth. 
FI.  Austr.  iii.  370.  Radical  leaves  lanceolate,  oblanceolate,  oblong  or  broadly 
linear,  coarsely  prickly-toothed,  narrowed  into  a petiole,  rarely  above  8 or  4in. 
long  and  usually  much  shorter.  Stems  elongated,  prostrate,  having  the 
appearance  of  stolons,  but  not  rooting.  Floral  leaves  opposite,  cuneate  or  linear, 
mostly  4-  to  lin.  long,  with  3 to  5 pungent  teeth  or  lobes.  Peduncles  radical  or 
from  the  nodes,  each  with  a small  hemispherical  globular  or  shortly  ovoid  head. 
Outer  bracts  and  sometimes  a few  of  the  inner  ones  linear  or  lanceolate,  rigid, 
pungent  and  far  exceeding  the  flowers,  the  others  much  smaller.  Scales  or 
vesicles  of  the  calyx-tube  sometimes  lanceolate  and  acute,  sometimes  oblong  and 
obtuse.  Petals  with  the  inflected  points  slightly  jagged. — DC.  Prod.  iv.  92  ; 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  159. 

Hali.:  Darling  Downs. 

The  species  is  also  in  New  Zealand. 

3.  E.  plantagineum  (Plantain-like),  F.  r.  M.  in  Prof.  Ho;/.  Sue.  Tasm.  iii. 
235;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  37 1.  Very  closely  allied  to  F.  rostratum,  with  the 
same  habit,  foliage,  and  flowers,  but  the  heads  sometimes  2in.  long,  are  oblong- 
cylindrical,  and  the  bracts  smaller,  a few  only  of  the  outer  ones  and  very  rarely 
1 or  2 of  the  upper  ones  projecting  far  beyond  the  flowers. 

Hah.:  Darling  and  Peak  Downs.  Barcoo,  Springsure. 

4.  E.  expansum  (spreading),  F.  r.  M.  in  Proc.  Ho;/.  Sue.  Tasm.  iii.  236; 
Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  371.  Radical  leaves  oblong  or  almost  obovate,  2 to  3in. 
long,  narrowed  into  a petiole,  bordered  by  coarse  prickly  teeth  or  lobes.  Stems 
erect  or  diffuse,  dichotomous,  extending  to  1 or  2ft.  Floral  leaves  opposite,  short 
and  broad,  deeply  divided  into  3 or  rarely  5 divaricate  cuneate  prickly-toothed 
lobes.  Peduncles  in  the  forks  very  short,  each  with  a small  globular  head  of  6 to 
8 or  rarely  more  small  flowers.  Bracts  linear  or  lanceolate,  pungent,  all,  at  least 
the  outer  ones,  much  longer  than  the  flowers.  Flowers  scarcely  1 line  long, 
including  the  ovary.  Calyx-lobes  shorter  than  the  adnafce  tube  (or  ovary), 
pungent-pointed  as  in  the  rest  of  the  genus.  Petals  very  short,  the  inflected  end 
obtuse,  entire. — Klatt  in  Linmea,  xxix.  712. 

Hab.:  Brisbane,  Dawson  and  Burnett  Rivers ; Peak  Downs,  Wide  Bay.  Moreton  Bay. 

The  species  has  some  resemblance  to  the  tropical  American  firtidum,  but  it  is  remarkable 
for  the  smallness  of  its  flowerheads. — Benth. 


7.  BUPLEURUM,  Linn. 

(Derivation  obscure.) 

Calyx-teeth  none.  Petals  obovate,  emarginate.  Styles  short.  Fruit  laterally 
compressed,  slightly  constricted  at  the  commissure  ; carpels  terete  or  subpen- 
tagonal ; primary  ridges  distinct,  sometimes  subulate,  rarely  obscure  ; secondary 
wanting  or  obscure  ; vittte  1 to  3 between  the  primary  ridges,  rarely  wanting  or 
many  ; carpophore  entire,  2-fid  or  2-partite.  Disk  depressed,  rarely  prominent 
in  fruit.  Seeds  terete,  sometimes  slightly  grooved  on  the  inner  face.  Glabrous 
herbs  or  shrubs.  Leaves  entire.  Umbels  compound,  bracts  and  bracteoles 
foliaceous  or  setaceous,  or  none.  Flowers  yellow  or  lurid,  pedicelled  or  sub- 
sessile. 

1.  B.  rotundifolium  (round-leaved),  Linn.  Common  Hare’s-ear ; Thorow- 
wax.  Cauline  leaves  perfoliate.  Umbels  5 to  0-rayed.  Involucre  wanting, 
involucels  5-leaved.  Fruit  ribs  slender. 

Hub.:  This  European  species  has  become  naturalised  in  several  southern  localities. 


721 


LX.  UMBELLTFER/E. 


8.  APIUM,  Linn. 

(Derivation  obscure.) 

Calyx-teeth  inconspicuous.  Petals  ovate  or  broad,  with  a short  indexed  tip, 
the  margins  not  recurved,  scarcely  imbricate.  Disk  rather  thick,  confluent  with 
the  conical  base  of  the  styles.  Fruit  short,  slightly  compressed  laterally. 
Carpels  ovoid,  with  5 prominent  ribs,  the  lateral  ones  close  to  the  rather  narrow 
commissure,  with  1 vitta  under  each  furrow,  and  usually  2 at  the  commissure. 
Carpophore  undivided.  Seed  nearly  terete,  straight. — -Erect  or  prostrate  herbs. 
Leaves  ternately  or  pinnately  dissected.  • Umbels  compound,  leaf-opposed  or 
terminal,  without  involucral  bracts. 

The  genus,  whether  limited  to  3 or  4 species,  or  further  extended  to  include  several  species 
distinguished  upon  slight  grounds  by  modern  botanists,  will  be  found  to  extend  over  most  of  the 
temperate  and  warmer  regions  of  the  globe.  Both  the  Australian  species  have  a wide  range,  one 
chiefly  in  the  southern  hemisphere  without  the  tropics,  the  other  in  America  and  tropical 
Africa. — Benth. 

Leaves  once  or  twice  pinnate,  with  3 or  ■>  more  or  less  divided  broad  or 

narrow  segments 1.  .4.  australe. 

Leaves  ternately  divided  into  numerous  filiform  segments  or  lobes  ...  2.  A.  leptophyllum. 

1.  A.  australe  (Australian),  Thou.:  Hool;.  /.  FI.  Tamil,  i.  160;  Benth.  FI. 
Anstr.  iii.  372.  Stems  usually  prostrate  or  decumbent,  rarely  erect,  from  very 
short  to  1 or  2ft.  long,  or  even  more.  Leaves  once  or  twice  pinnatipartite,  very 
variable  in  size  and  shape,  the  segments  3-partite,  with  incised  lobes,  from 
broadly  obovate  to  narrow-linear,  the  lower  ones  on  rather  long  petiolules. 
Umbels  sessile  or  very  shortly  pedunculate  at  the  nodes,  of  from  3 to  6 rays, 
each  with  a small  umbel  of  rather  numerous  white  flowers,  without  involucral 
bracts.  Disk  broad  and  thick,  almost  flat.  Carpels  with  the  primary  ribs  very 
prominent,  almost  corky,  and  narrow  furrows  between  them  ; vittae  usually  broad, 
but  not  very  distinct.: — A.  prostratum,  Labill.  PI.  Nov.  Holl.  i.  76  t.  103  ; Vent. 
•Tard.  Malm.  t.  81  ; Petroselinum  prostratum,  DC.  Prod.  iv.  102;  Hook.  Ic.  PI.  t. 
305  ; Helosciadium  australe,  Bunge  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  294  ; H.  prostration,  Bunge, 
l.c.  295. 

Hab.:  Very  common  in  swamps. 

There  are  2 common  forms,  one  with  short  broad  very  obtuse  leaf-segments,  chiefly  found 
near  the  sea ; and  some  specimens  from  the  seacoast  of  Tasmania,  the  islands  of  Bass’s  Straits 
and  adjoining  coasts  of  the  mainland,  have  a thick  almost  woody  stem  and  large  thick  leaves 
divided  into  very  numerous  small  obtuse  segments.  The  other  form  has  numerous  long  narrrow 
acute  linear  segments,  and  often  seems  too  unlike  the  maritime  one  to  belong  to  the  same  species, 
but  the  intermediates  between  the  two  are  very  numerous,  passing  gradually  from  the  one  to  the 
other.—  Benth. 

The  species  is  also  in  New  Zealand,  the  S.  Pacific  Islands,  Antarctic  America,  and  perhaps  in 
South  Africa.  It  is  very  near  the  wild  celery  of  the  northern  hemisphere  (A.  yraveolens,  Linn.), 
but  that  has  generally  an  erect  stem,  and  the  ribs  of  the  fruit  appear  to  be  always  much  more 
slender,  with  broad  furrows  between  them. — Benth. 

2.  A.  leptophyllum  (divisions  of  leaf  very  narrow),  F.  v.  M.  Herb.;  Benth. 
FI.  Anstr.  iii.  372.  An  erect  or  diffuse  slender  glabrous  annual  of  1 to  2ft. 
Leaves  ternately  divided  into  numerous  filiform  segments,  the  lower  ones 
petiolate,  the  upper  ones  sessile,  with  fewer  segments.  Umbels  at  the  nodes 
sessile  or  pedunculate,  of  2 or  3 slender  rays,  each  with  a partial  umbel  of  many 
flowers  on  slender  pedicels,  without  involucral  bracts.  Disk  rather  broad,  convex, 
scarcely  distinct  from  the  very  short  styles.  Ribs  of  the  carpels  very  prominent 
and  thick,  almost  corky,  separated  by  very  narrow  furrows,  with  one  vitta  under 
each  hirrov>r.—Heloseiadiion  leptophyllum,  DC.  Prod.  iv.  105,  with  the  numerous 
synonyms  adduced. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay;  a common  weed. 

The  species  is  common  in  South  America,  extending  to  the  southern  States  of  North  America, 
and  is  also  found  in  tropical  Africa.  —Benth, 


LX.  UMBELLIFERffi. 


725 


9.  *AMMI,  Linn. 

(From  ammos,  sand  ; habitation  of  plants.) 

Calyx-teeth  obsolete  or  small.  Petals  obovate,  with  an  indexed  point,  emar- 
ginate,  or  with  2 unequal  lobes,  the  exterior  ones  frequently  larger.  Fruit  laterally 
compressed,  ovate-oblong.  Carpels  with  5 filiform  equal  ribs,  the  lateral  ones 
marginal.  Interval  with  single  vitta,  commissure  with  2 vittie.  carpophore  free, 
2 -parted.  Seeds  terete-convex,  flattish  on  the  face.  Herbs  with  a fusiform  root 
and  pinnately  divided  or  many-parted  leaves.  Umbels  compound,  many-rayed. 
Involucre  many-leaved,  the  leaflets  3-cleft  or  pinnatifid.  Involucels  many-leaved, 
the  leaflets  undivided. 

Genus  of  a few  species  "rowing  chiefly  in  the  Mediterranean  region,  and  extending  to  Chili 
and  Brazil. 


1.  A.  majus  (the  greater),  Linn.  Common  Bishop’s  Weed.  Stems  3 to 
4ft.  high,  subglaucent,  glabrous,  terete.  Leaves  pinnately  divided,  segments 
cartilaginous  on  the  margin,  acutely  serrate;  lower  ones  lanceolate;  the 
upper  ones  many-cleft,  linear.  Primary  rays  of  the  umbel  sometimes  2in.  long, 
slender,  and  as  well  as  the  secondary  rays  scattered  with  a few  minute  serrulate 
points  ; secondary  rays  1 to  2in.  long,  about  equalling  the  linear  acute  bracteoles. 
Bracts  of  the  involucre  f to  lin.  long.  Fruit  ^ line  long. 

Hab.:  This  European  weed  has  become  naturalised  in  many  southern  localities. 


10.  SIUM,  Linn. 

(Supposed  to  be  derived  from  the  Celtic  word  for  water.) 

Calyx-teeth  acute  or  obsolete.  Petals  white,  emarginate.  Fruit  ovoid  or 
oblong,  laterally  compressed,  constricted  at  the  commissure  ; primary  ridges 
prominent,  obtuse,  frequently  thickened  ; furrows  8 to  2 (or  1-)  vittate  ; carpo- 
phore completely  bipartite,  each  half  adnate  to  the  adjoining  mericarp.  Seed 
terete. — Glabrous  herbs.  Leaves  pinnate,  pinnae  toothed.  Umbels  compound 
terminal  and  lateral ; bracts  and  bracteoles  several. 

Plants  of  the  north  temperate  zone,  South  Africa,  and  Australia. 

1.  S.  latifolium  (broad-leaved),  Linn.  Water  Parsnip.  A swamp  plant  1 
to  2ft.  high.  Leaves  simply  pinnate.  Fruits  nearly  those  of  Apium,  but  the 
calyx-teeth  usually  prominent  and  several  vittie  under  each  furrow.  Umbels 
terminal,  with  general  and  partial  involucres. 

Hab.:  In  the  southern  swamps  ; abundant  at  Toowoomba,  and  most  probably  indigenous. 


11.  CENANTHE,  Linn. 

(Supposed  to  have  a wine  fragrance.) 

C&lyx-teeth  small,  acute.  Petals  emarginate.  Fruit  glabrous,  ellipsoid,  longer 
than  broad,  or  globose,  nearly  terete,  commissure  broad ; carpels  half-terete, 
dorsally  compressed,  inner  face  plane  ; lateral  primary  ridges  large,  triangular, 
corky  ; dorsal  and  intermediate  primary  ridges  much  smaller,  sometimes  obsolete, 
or  all  subequal ; furrows  1-vittate  ; carpophore  none  ; disk  usually  not  prominent. 
Seed  terete  or  dorsally  compressed,  inner  face  plane. — Herbs,  growing  in  wet 
places,  roots  fibrous  creeping  or  stoloniferous.  Leaves  1 to  3-pinnate,  ultimate 
segments  large  or  linear  or  minute,  rarely  reduced  almost  to  sheaths.  Umbels 
compound  ; bracts  none  or  1 ; bracteoles  several,  linear.  Flowers  white,  often 
polygamous,  males  sometimes  radiant. 

Most  of  the  species  found  in  northern  hemisphere  and  South  Africa. 


72G 


LX.  UMBELLIFEILE. 


[<1,  nanthe. 


1.  CE.  stolonifera  (sucker-bearing),  Wall.  Stoloniferous,  steins  glabrous  or 
nearly  so,  2 to  1ft.  long,  often  floating,  rooting  from  the  lower  nodes.  Leaves 
from  3-partite  to  2-pinnate,  secondary  pinnie  lanceolate  or  rhomboid-lanceolate, 
serrate;  ultimate  segments  1 to  2in.  long,  A to  lin.  broad,  those  of  the  upper 
leaves  never  linear.  Peduncles  usually  elongate.  Pedicels  1 to  1^  line  long. 
Kays  6 to  GO,  A to  2in.  long,  stout.  Fruits  1^  line  long,  subquadrate-ellipsoid, 
sometimes  shorter,  scarcely  longer  than  broad  ; dorsal  and  intermediate  ridges 
usually  distinct,  scarcely  prominent.  Seed  in  horizontal  section,  nearly  circular. 
— Wight  Ic.  t.  571  ; <K.  javanira , DC.;  Plu’llaml  ritim  stole  nip  nun,  Roxb. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  . T . DnUnrluj  (F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  v.  182). 

12.  CRANTZIA,  Nutt. 

(After  Professor  Crantz.) 

Calyx-teeth  shortly  prominent.  Petals  acute,  concave,  the  margins  not 
recurved,  imbricate  in  the  bud.  Disk  scarcely  distinct  from  the  conical  base  of 
the  styles.  Fruit  broadly  ovoid,  very  slightly  laterally  compressed.  Carpels 
nearly  terete,  with  5 corky  ribs,  the  lateral  ones  forming  a thick  mass  at  the 
rather  broad  commissure,  with  1 vitta  under  each  furrow  and  2 at  the  commissure. 
Carpophore  not  separating  from  the  carpels.  Albumen  of  the  seed  terete. — 
Small  creeping  herb.  Leaves  linear-terete,  undivided.  Umbels  simple,  with 
minute  involucral  bracts. 

The  genus  is  confined  to  a single  species,  extending  to  New  Zealand  and  extratropical  and 
Andine  America.—  Bent h. 

1.  C.  lineata  (referring  to  the  transverse  lines  in  the  leaves),  Nutt.  Gen.  PI. 
N.  Amer.  i.  178;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  374.  Stems  or  rhizomes  slender,  creeping 
and  rooting  at  the  nodes.  Leaves  solitary  or  tufted  at  the  nodes,  slender, 
tistulose,  marked  with  transverse  nodes,  from  under  lin.  in  some  specimens  to  2 
or  Bin.  long,  or  even  more,  rarely  in  American  specimens  broader  and  flattened 
at  the  upper  end.  Peduncles  filiform,  solitary  at  the  nodes,  each  with  an  umbel 
of  8 to  12  or  sometimes  more  minute  flowers,  on  pedicels  of  1 to  2 lines.  Fruits 
very  small. — DC.  Prod.  iv.  71  ; Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  160,  and  FI.  Antarct.  287 
t.  100 ; Wedd.  Chlor.  And.  ii.  t.  68. — C.  amtralira,  F.  v.  M.  2nd  Gen.  Rep. 
according  to  Klatt,  Linntea,  xxix.  714. 

Hab.:  In  the  marshes  of  the  Brisbane  River.  Flowering  during  December. 


13.  : CORIANDRUM,  Linn. 

(Said  to  be  derived  from  the  bug-like  scent  of  plant.) 

Calyx-teeth  small,  acute,  often  unequal.  Petals  obovate,  emarginate,  white  or 
purplish,  of  the  outer  flowers  unequal,  often  radiant.  Fruit  subglobose,  ridges 
not  prominent,  dorsal  primary  and  adjacent  secondary  strongest,  lateral  primary 
and  secondary  obscure ; vittae  obscure,  solitary,  under  the  secondary  ridges  ; 
carpels  slightly  concave  on  the  inner  face,  commissure  distinctly  2-vittate ; 
carpophore  2-partite.  Seeds  convexo-concave,  about  thrice  as  broad  as  thick. — 
A herb,  annual,  branched,  glabrous.  Leaves  decompound.  Umbels  compound, 
rays  few ; bracts  none  or  small  linear  ; bracteoles  few,  filiform. 

1.  C.  sativum  (cultivated),  Linn.  Coriander.  The  ultimate  segments  of 
the  lower  leaves  ovate  or  lanceolate,  of  the  upper  linear.  Fruit  globose, 
10-ribbed. 

Hab.:  A plant  of  southern  Europe,  met  with  as  a stray  from  cultivation 


LX.  UMBELLIFER/E. 


727 


14.  DAUCUS,  Linn. 

(From  the  Greek.) 

Calyx-teeth  prominent.  Petals  with  inflexed  points,  the  margins  not  recurved, 
slightly  imbricate  in  the  bud.  Disk  small,  confluent  with  the  conical  base  of  the 
styles.  Fruit  ovoid  or  oblong,  scarcely  compressed,  bristly ; carpels  dorsally 
compressed,  the  primary  ribs  inconspicuous  or  not  prominent,  the  4 secondary 
ribs  very  prominent,  expanded  into  rows  of  glochidiate  bristles,  with  1 vitta  under 
each  secondary  rib  and  2 at  the  broad  commissure.  Carpophore  simple  or 
bipartite. — Annuals  or  biennials,  usually  hirsute.  Leaves  decompound,  with 
narrow  segments.  Umbels  compound,  the  bracts  of  the  general  involucre 
usually  dissected. 

Besides  the  Australian  species,,  which  extends  over  New  Zealand  and  Western  America,  the 
genus  includes  the  Carrot  and  a few  other  species  natives  of  the  northern  hemisphere. — Benth. 

1.  D.  brachiatus  (branches  at  right  angles  to  each  other),  Sieli.  in  DC. 
Crod.  iv.  214  ; Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  876.  An  erect  or  decumbent  annual,  some- 
times small  and  slender,  sometimes  stout  and  attaining  1 to  2ft.,  more  or  less 
sprinkled  or  hirsute  with  short  stiff  hairs.  Leaves  on  slender  petioles,  twice 
pinnate,  with  short  narrow  incised  or  pinnate  segments,  usually  minutely 
mucronulate.  Umbels  of  about  8 to  5 very  unequal  rays,  with  2 or  8 floral  leaves 
or  involucral  bracts  divided  into  2 or  8 linear-subulate  segments  ; one  of  the  rays 
sometimes  growing  out  into  a continuation  of  the  stem  and  bearing  another 
compound  umbel.  Fruit  ovoid,  varying  very  much  in  size,  usually  scarcely 
2 lines  long,  with  short  bristles,  sometimes  above  3 lines  long,  the  bristles  long 
and  very  fine,  or  stout  and  dilated  at  the  base. — Bunge  in  PI.  Preiss.  i.  295  ; 
Hook.  f.  FI.  Tasm.  i.  161,  with  the  synonyms  adduced  (except  P.  pitsilhts,  Mich.); 
Seandi.r  f/lochidiata,  Labill.  PI.  Nov.  Holl.  i.  75  t.  102. 

Hab.:  A very  common  South  Queensland  weed. 

J.  D.  Hooker  includes  among  the  synonyms  of  this  species  the  Davcus  pinnllttg,  Mich.,  of  the 
United  States  of  N.  America,  and  on  that  authority  F.  v.  Mueller  takes  Michaux’s  name  as  the 
oldest  for  the  species.  I).  pusilhix  appears,  however,  always  to  have  the  umbel,  although  small, 
regular  with  numerous  rays,  and  more  dissected  involucral  bracts,  as  in  D.  Ca rota,  and  must 
probably  be  retained  as  a distinct  species  connecting  in  some  measure  I),  brachiatus  with  l). 
Carota.  — Benth . 


Order  LXI.  ARALIACEjE. 

Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary ; limb  forming  a slightly  raised  line  or  short 
cup  round  the  summit,  truncate  or  toothed,  or  quite  inconspicuous.  Petals  5 or 
more,  or  rarely  4,  usually  valvate  and  shortly  inflected  at  the  tip,  and  often 
cohering,  rarely  with  a long  inflected  point,  or  (in  a few  species  not  Australian) 
obtuse  and  imbricate,  inserted  round  an  epigynous  entire  disk.  Stamens  as  many 
as  petals  or  sometimes  (in  genera  not  Australian)  more,  inserted  with  them  round 
the  epigynous  disk ; anthers  versatile,  with  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally. 
Ovary  inferior,  2 or  more  celled,  or  very  rarely  1-celled  by  abortion,  with  1 
anatropous  ovule  in  each  cell,  pendulous  from  the  summit.  Styles  as  many  as 
cells,  either  distinct  erect  and  afterwards  recurved  with  small  terminal  stigmas, 
or  united  in  a cone,  or  reduced  to  a slight  protuberance  with  as  many  stigmas  as 
cells  radiating  on  the  summit  and  often  scarcely  conspicuous.  Fruit  more  or 
less  drupaceous  and  indehiscent,  the  epicarp  succulent,  rarely  nearly  dry  and  thin, 
always  distinct  from  the  endocarp,  which  is  hardened  into  as  many  1 -seeded 
pyrenes  as  cells  of  the  ovary,  usually  laterally  compressed.  Seed  pendulous, 
testa  very  thin,  albumen  the  shape  of  the  pyrene,  with  an  even  surface,  or  rarely 
ruminate.  Embryo  minute,  near  the  apex  of  the  seed,  the  radical  superior. — 
Trees,  shrubs,  or  woody  climbers,  very  rarely  (in  a few  specimens  not  Australian) 
herbs.  Leaves  simple,  digitate  or  pinnately  compound,  sometimes  very  large, 
Part  II  on 


72ft 


LXT.  ATIALTACE/F.. 


the  rhachis  often  articulate,  the  petiole  dilated  at  the  base  or  the  dilatations 
united  in  an  intrapetiolar  stipule.  Flowers  small,  often  greenish  or  purple,  in 
umbels  heads  or  rarely  racemes,  which  are  usually  disposed  in  large  terminal 
racemes  or  panicles,  the  umbels  rarely  solitary  or  in  compound  umbels.  Bracts 
usually  small  and  often  inconspicuous  or  none.  Flowers  frequently  polygamous, 
the  ovary  entirely  abortive  in  the  males,  the  stamens  often  smaller  or  rarely 
wanting  in  the  females. 

With  the  exception  of  a very  few  species  in  the  temperate  regions  of  the  northern  and  southern 
hemispheres,  the  Order  is  confined  to  the  tropics  in  the  New  as  well  as  in  the  Old  World. 
Ilenth. 

Generally  speaking.  Araliacew  differ  front  VmheUifer<r  by  their  tall  shrubby  or  arborescent 
habit,  large  leaves,  paniculate  inflorescence,  valvatc  petals,  entire  disk  and  drupaceous  fruits, 
but  every  one  of  these  characters  breaks  down  in  some  exceptional  case,  and  some  have  proposed 
to  unite  the  two  Orders.  But  such  connecting  links  occur  in  the  case  of  even  the  most  natural 
Orders,  and  it  appears  to  me  that  if  .tstrotricha  and  Horsfieldia  are  transferred  from  Vmbcllifcne, 
where  they  have  been  hitherto  placed,  into  A raliaccee.  there  is  really  very  little  difficulty  in 
drawing  the  line  of  demarcation  between  the  two.-  Benlh. 

Series  I.  Aralieae. — Petal * more  or  lex*  imbricate,  attached  by  a broad  bane. 

Gynreceum  2-merous.  Fruit  transversely  subterete,  pyrenes  hemispherical. 

Leaves  pinnate.  Umbels  in  panicles.  Pedicels  articulate  under  the  flowers  1.  Det.arbrf.a. 
Gynoecium  2 to  5-merous.  Fruit  angular  when  dry.  Leaves  digitate, 
pinnate  or  decompound ; leaflets  serrulate.  Umbels  solitary,  racemose, 
paniculate  or  rarely  umbellate.  Pedicels  articulate,  under  the  flower  . . 2.  Arai.ia. 

Gynoecium  5-merous.  F'ruit  angular  when  dry.  Leaves  pinnate,  3 to  7- 
foliolate ; leaflets  serrulate  to  quite  entire.  Umbellate  or  racemose- 
paniculate.  Pedicels  subarticulate 3.  Pf.xtapanax. 

Series  II.  Mackinlayieae.  -Petal*  contracted  into  a very  short  claw , involute,  valvatc. 

Gynoecium  2-merous.  Styles  free.  Fruit  laterally  piano-compressed.  Leaves 

digitate.  Umbels  compound.  Pedicels  articulate,  under  the  flower  ...  4.  Mackixlaya. 

Series  III.  Panace®.  — Petal*  valvale.  Stamens  the  same  number  as  petal*.  Albumen 


uniform. 

Fruit  laterally  compressed  or  subterete ; pyrenes  2,  furrowed  on  each  side  of 
the  commissural  edge,  or  curved  into  spurious  empty  cells.  Leaves  simple, 

entire  woolly  beneath.  Umbels  in  panicles 5.  Astrotricha. 

Fruit  2-eelled.  2-seeded  Leaves  trifoliolate  or  reduced  to  a single  leaflet  . 6.  Mothf.rwellia 

Fruit  laterally  compressed  or  didymous,  rarely  2 to  3-angular.  Filaments 
filiform  ; styles  distinct,  at  length  recurved  ; stigmas  introrse,  more  or  less 
decurrent.  Leaves  bipinnate,  pinnate,  digitate,  or  1-foliolate.  Umbels 

capitate  or  in  racemose  panicles 7.  Panax. 

Flowers  5 to  6-merous.  rarely  4 or  7 to  8-merous.  Drupe  angular-costate 
when  dry.  Leaves  digitate,  rarely  1-foliolate.  Umbellate,  the  umbels  in 

racemes  or  racemose  panicles.  Pedicels  not  articulate 8.  Heptaplecrum 

Flowers  usually  10  to  12-merous.  Drupe  globose,  sulcate  or  costate.  Leaves 
digitate.  Heads  in  racemes  or  panicles.  Flowers  sessile,  within  3 or  4 
bracts 9.  Brassaia. 


Series  IV.  Xfederese. — Petal*  valrate.  Stamen * the  same  number  as  petal*.  Albumen 
ruminate. 

Gynoecium  3 to  7-merous,  usually  5-merous.  Styles  conical  or  connate  in  a 
short  column.  Leaves  simple  or  pinnate.  Umbels  in  panicles.  Pedicels 
not  articulate 10.  Hedera. 


1.  DELARBREA,  Vieill. 

(After  M.  Delarbre.) 

Calyx-limb  broad  campanulate  ; lobes  5,  imbricate,  obtuse.  Petals  5,  ovate, 
imbricate,  very  caducous.  Stamens  5,  filaments  filiform  ; anthers  ovate.  Disk 
small,  somewhat  thick,  subconical.  Ovary  2-celled  ; styles  distinct,  erect,  the 
upper  part  clavate.  Stigmas  terminal.  Fruit  ovoid,  scarcely  compressed,  exocarp 
thin,  fleshy,  often  full  of  oil -bladders ; pyrenes  chartaceous  or  subcrnstaceous, 
hemispherical,  commissural  face  plane,  or  somewhat  concave,  the  back  sub-3- 


Dehrhrra: 


LXI.  ARALIACEiE. 


720 


ribbed,  full  all  through  of  oil-bladders.  Seeds  dorsally  compressed,  albumen 
uniform. — Little-branched  glabrous  tall  shrubs.  Leaves  alternate,  crowded  at  the 
top  of  stem  and  end  of  branches,  imparipinnate  ; leaflets  coriaceous,  entire  or 
obscurely  repando-orenulate,  stipules  adnate  to  the  petiole.  The  umbels  in 
panicles.  Bracts  few,  ovate.  Pedicels  articulate  under  the  flower. 

Besides  the  Queensland  plant,  *2  are  found  in  New  Caledonia.  B.  and  H.  Gen.  PI.  i.  935. 

1.  D.  Michieana  (after  Archibald  Michie),  F.  r.  M.  Vmijtn.  vii.  95  (under 
Porospermum).  A small  tree,  the  bases  of  the  petioles  with  stipule-like 
expansions.  Rhachis  cylindric,  2 to  4ft.  long.  Leaflets  about  30,  the  upper  ones 
attaining  Tin.  in  length  and  2in.  in  breadth,  coriaceous-chartaceous,  acuminate, 
glossy  above,  pale  beneath.  Panicles  2 to  3ft.  long,  on  peduncles  about  1ft., 
little  branched  ; bracts  narrow-lanceolate.  Flower  umbels  in  racemes.  Pedicels 
1 to  4 lines  long.  Calyx  split  into  lobes  about  b line  long.  Petals  1 line  long. 
Anthers  a little  shorter  than  the  petals,  obtuse,  yellow.  Styles  about  1 line  long, 
recurved.  Disk  almost  pyramidal.  Fruit  7 to  10  lines  long,  almost  drupaceous, 
dark  blue,  oval ; a transverse  section  showing  a ring  of  large  oil  cells. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay.  Mulgrave  River,  and  many  other  localities  in  north  Queensland. 


2.  ARALIA,  Linn. 

(Derivation  obscure.) 

Calyx-margin  truncate  or  5-toothed;  petals  5,  ovate,  imbricate  in  the  bud; 
stamens  5 ; ovary  2 to  5-celled  ; styles  2 to  5,  free  or  shortly  connate  at  the  base 
(at  least  in  the  seed- producing  flowers).  Fruit  4 to  5-eelled,  4 to  5-angular,  or 
subglobose  2 to  3-celled.  Albumen  uniform. — Herbs,  shrubs,  or  small  trees, 
glabrous,  hairy,  or  prickly.  Leaves  alternate  or  whorled,  digitate-pinnate  or 
compound-pinnate  ; leaflets  serrate  or  nearly  entire  ; stipules  not  prominent. 
Umbels  solitary  or  in  racemes  or  panicles,  rarely  in  compound  umbels  ; pedicels 
jointed  close  under  the  flower  or  not.  Flowers  often  polygamo-monoecious. — 
Hook.  FI.  Brit.  Ind. 

1.  A.  Macdowalli  (after  A.  M‘Dowall),  F.  r.  M.,  Son.  Sri.  Iier.,  April 
1880.  Tree  with  slender  erect  trunk  30  to  40ft.  high,  the  whole  as  well  as  the 
branches  densely  covered  with  short,  stout,  sharp  prickles  except  on  the  petioles, 
although  present  there.  Leaves  long,  simply  pinnate,  leaflets  numerous,  6 to 
8in.  long  and  2in.  or  more  broad,  the  margins  entire,  pointed  at  the  apex,  blunt 
at  the  base,  both  sides  dark-green.  Umbels  solitary  or  2 or  3 together,  spreading, 
with  a linear-lanceolate  bract  at  the  base,  the  pedunculate  umbels  arranged  on  an 
elongated  general  flower-stalk.  Flowers  seceding  from  the  persistent  stalklets. 
Calyxes  nearly  2 lines  long,  the  lobes  occupying  about  one-fourth  of  the  whole 
length.  Petals  nearly  ovate,  prominently  lined  inside  along  the  middle.  Anthers 
almost  sessile,  oblong  ; styles  2,  erect,  rather  thick,  free ; stigmas  acute,  conver- 
gent. The  ripe  fruit  said  to  be  blue. — Pana.c  Maedowalli,  F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hah.:  Russell  River,  If.  Hill,  and  many  other  tropical  localities. 

This  species  approaches  Pnna.r  Mumnfi.  F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

3.  PENTAPANAX,  Seem. 

(From  the  parts  of  flowers  being  in  fives.) 

Calyx-teeth  5.  Petals  5,  imbricated  in  bud.  Stamens  5.  Ovary  5 (or  4) 
celled.  Styles  5 or  4,  combined  to  the  summit  or  free  for  more  than  half  their 
length.  Fruit  5 or  4-celled  and  angled.  Albumen  uniform. — Trees  or  large 
scandent  shrubs.  Leaves  simply  pinnate,  with  5 to  9 leaflets,  or  digitate  with  3 
to  5 leaflets,  glabrous.  Leaflets  entire,  crenate,  or  serrate.  Flowers  hermaphro- 
dite or  polygamous,  in  compound  racemes  or  umbelled  ; pedicpls  jointed  close 
under  the  flowers, — FI.  of  Brit.  Ind.  ii.  723. 


71-50 


LX  I.  ARALTACEjE. 


I ’i  iitii/in  nax. 


1.  F.  Willmottii  (after  Dr.  J.  Willmott),  b . v.  M.  Austr.  Journ.  of  Phann., 
April  1887.  A tree  about  80ft.  high.  Branchlets  robust,  the  leaves  crowded 
towards  the  summits,  pinnate,  mostly  5 or  sometimes  8-foliolate ; petioles 
slender,  about  tin.  long.  Stipules  about  {-in.  long,  rather  narrow,  adnate  except 
summit  ; petioles  slender,  rather  elongated  to  1-Jin.  long.  Leaflets  in  distant 
pairs,  dark-green  on  both  sides,  chartaeeous  to  lin.  long,  lin.  wide,  elliptic- 
lanceolate,  acuminate,  entire,  somewhat  crisped,  shining,  blunt  at  the  base, 
subtle-veined.  Umbels  almost  cymosely  arranged,  seldom  exceeding  lin.  in 
length,  the  whole  inflorescence  much  surpassed  by  the  nearest  leaves.  Flowers 
not  seen.  Pedicels  somewhat  longer  than  the  fruiting-calyx  ; limb  of  the  latter 
undulated  and  bluntly  5-toothed.  Styles  very  short,  undivided  ; disk  depressed. 
Fruit  campanulate,  semi-ovate,  5-angled,  5-seeded,  not  distinctly  jointed  on  the 
pedicel,  about  {-in.  long,  their  longitudinal  angles  blunt;  pericarp  somewhat 
succulent ; each  endoearp  pale-brownish,  dimidiate-ovate,  about  {in.  long, 
narrowed  at  the  inner  angle,  bluntly  rounded  at  the  back,  somewhat  wrinkled 
at  the  sides;  testa  membranous,  not  intruding.  Albumen  equable,  but  slightly 
glandular:  embryo  minute. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Mount  Bellenden  Ker,  at  an  elevation  of  about  5000ft.,  Bayer  and  Davidson. 

So  far  as  the  earpologic  characteristics  are  concerned,  this  plant  is  clearly  referable  to  the 
genus  Pentapanax,  and  differs  from  its  ally  P.  l.esckenaultii  in  smaller  not  serrulated  leaflets 
on  longer  stalklets,  in  its  umbels  containing  far  less  flowers,  and  in  the  less  indented  calyx-limb. 
Perhaps,  also,  the  structure  of  the  flowers  and  colour  of  fruit  may  prove  different.  F.  r.  M l.c. 


4.  MACKINLAYA,  F.  v.  M. 

(After  J.  Mackinlay.) 

Calyx  with  5 prominent  lobes.  Petals  unguiculate,  with  long  induplicate 
points,  valvate  in  the  bud.  Stamens  5.  Disk  broad,  the  margin  undulate. 
Ovary  2-eelled.  Styles  2,  at  first  erect,  afterwaids  recurved.  Fruit  very  flat,  the 
endoearp  cartilaginous,  forming  2 separate  pyrenes,  the  exocarp  succulent. — 
Shrub  or  tree.  Leaves  digitately  compound.  Flowers  polygamous,  articulate  on 
the  pedicels,  in  a large  compound  terminal  umbel,  with  general  and  partial 
involucres  of  narrow  bracts. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species,  endemic  in  Australia,  differing  from  Panax  chiefly  in 
inflorescence  and  in  the  petals  resembling  those  of  many  I'mbelliferte. — Benth. 

1.  1YE.  macrosciadia  (umbels  long),  1\  r.  M.  Fray  in.  iv.  120;  Bentli.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  383.  A slender  shrub  or  small  tree,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  with  the 
common  petiole  sheathing  at  the  base,  but  without  distinct  stipules ; leaflets  3 to 
7,  usually  5,  petiolulate,  ovate  or  oblong,  shortly  acuminate,  entire  or  with  a few 
short  distant  teeth,  4 to  Bin.  long,  membranous  at  least  at  the  time  of  flowering. 
Umbels  3 times  or  even  4 times  compound,  with  numerous  rays,  the  primary 
ones  often  4 to  5in.  long,  the  secondary  and  tertiary  umbels  compact.  Involucres 
both  general  and  partial  of  several  linear  or  linear- lanceolate  bracts,  much  shorter 
than  the  rays.  Calyx-lobes  acute  or  acuminate.  Fruits  when  perfect  about  7 
lines  broad  and  5 lines  long,  but  1 carpel  often  deformed  and  semi-abortive. — 
Panax  macrosciadia,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  108,  17G. 

Hab:  E.  coast,  /?.  Broun , A.  Cunningham : Dunk  Island,  M-Gillirray  ; Fitzroy  Island. 
APGillivray,  IV.  Hill  : Port  Molle  and  Cumberland  Islands,  Fitzalan  : Rockingham  Bay. 
Dallachy. 


5.  ASTROTRICHA,  DC. 

(Hairs  of  plants  star-like.) 

Calyx-teeth  minutely  prominent.  Petals  5,  valvate,  usually  pubescent  outside. 
Stamens  5.  Disk  broad  and  not  thick,  the  margin  often  prominent.  Ovary 
2-celleh.  Styles  2,  distinct,  at  first  erect,  afterwards  recurved.  Fruit  flattened 


LXI.  ARALIACE&. 


781 


Astrotricha.] 

or  thick,  the  endocarp  hardened  into  2 pyrenes,  furrowed  on  each  side  of  the 
commissural  edge  or  curved  into  spurious  empty  cells,  the  endocarp  quite  distinct 
as  in  other  Avail  area,  hut  not  so  succulent.  Albumen  even. — Shrubs  more  or 
less  clothed  with  a stellate  tomentum.  Leaves  petiolate,  undivided,  entire. 
Umbels  pedunculate,  in  large  terminal  panicles.  Flowers  articulate  on  the 
pedicel. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  Australia.  It  is  usually  placed  in  Vmbellifene,  but  the  structure  of 
the  dowers  and  fruit,  as  well  as  the  habit,  are  much  nearer  those  of  Paiut.r,  from  which  the 
genus  differs  slightly  in  the  cpiearp  rather  drier,  in  the  foliage  and  the  stellate  tomentum. 
Benth. 

Fruit  thick,  with  narrow  wings  on  each  side.  Endocarp  curved  into 

spurious  cells  on  each  side  of  the  inner  angle  of  the  pyrene.  Leaves 

cordate-lanceolate 1.  A.  pterocarpa. 

Fruit  dat.  Endocarp  grooved  only  on  each  side  of  inner  angle  of  pyrene 

Leaves  from  ovate-lanceolate  to  narrow-lanceolate '2.  A . Jloccosa 

Leaves  linear-lanceolate,  acute,  mostly  3 to  din.  long.  Calyx-teeth 

scarcely  conspicuous 3.  A . longifolia. 

Leaves  from  oblong-linear  to  narrow  linear,  obtuse.  1 to  3in.  long. 

Calyx-teeth  prominent ...  . 1.  A.  Icdifolia. 

Leaves  broadish -linear,  or  sometimes  very  narrow,  2in.  long.  Calyx- 

teeth  minute 5.  A.  Biddulphiana. 

1.  A.  pterocarpa  (fruit  winged),  Heath.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  879.  A slender 

shrub  fir.  Hill).  Leaves  on  long  petioles,  cordate-lanceolate,  often  peltate,  0 to 
lOin.  long,  densely  floccose-tomentose  on  both  sides  as  well  as  the  leafy  branches. 
Panicle  very  large,  with  narrow  leafy  bracts  under  the  principal  branches. 
Umbels  dense,  many-flowered,  on  short  peduncles.  Pedicels  rarely  longer  than 
the  flowers.  Disk  scarcely  prominent.  Fruits  without  the  wings  ovoid-oblong, 
thick,  about  3 lines  long,  slightly  furrowed  ; the  endocarp  forming  3 collateral 
cells  in  each  carpel,  the  2 lateral  ones  empty,  the  central  one  enclosing  the  seed  ; 
the  epicarp  expanded  at  the  commissure  into  a rather  broad  wing,  often  not 
apparent  till  the  fruit  is  quite  ripe. 

Hab.:  Fitzroy  Island,  II’.  Hill;  Leichhardt  district;  Cape  Hirer,  K.  Bowman  (F.  v.  M.) 

2.  A.  floccosa  (tomentum  dense  and  loose),  DC.  Mein.  thnbell.  80  /.  5; 
Prod.  iv.  74;  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  879.  A shrub  attaining  from  10  to  80ft.,  the 
young  branches  inflorescence  and  under  side  of  the  leaves  clothed  with  a dense 
floccose  tomentum.  Leaves  from  ovate-lanceolate  to  lanceolate,  tapering  into  a 
narrow  point,  rounded  at  the  base  or  slightly  cordate,  the  larger  ones  sometimes 
almost  peltate,  4 to  8in.  long,  glabrous  on  the  upper  side,  the  floral  ones  small, 
linear-lanceolate,  or  the  upper  ones  reduced  to  small  bracts.  Umbels  numerous, 
many-flowered,  in  a large  terminal  panicle.  Petals  woolly-tomentose  outside. 
Disk  with  a slightly  raised  margin.  Fruit  nearly  2 lines  broad,  flat,  not  winged, 
the  endocarp  of  each  carpel  sometimes  grooved  or  folded  towards  the  commissure, 
but  not  curved  into  spurious  cells. — fioht.r  jlnrripes,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs. 

Hab.:  Islands  of  Moreton  Bay,  Brisbane  River,  and  several  othpr  southern  localities. 

Var.  brevifolia,  F.  v.  M.  Leaves  1 \ t-o  2in.  long. 

3.  A.  longifolia  (leaves  long),  Heath,  ia  Hue;/.  I Aim  a.  .75,  and  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
380.  Nearly  allied  to  the  narrow-leaved  varieties  of  A.  jloccosa,  but  the  leaves 
much  narrower,  the  panicle  more  slender,  with  fewer  flowers  to  the  umbel  and  the 
calyx-teeth  more  prominent.  Leaves  linear-lanceolate,  acuminate,  8 to  Sin.  long 
and  rarely  above  Jin.  broad,  glabrous  above,  with  a close  white  or  looser  and 
floccose  tomentum  underneath,  or  rarely  almost  glabrous.  Fruits  rather  larger 
than  in  A.  Jloccosa. 

Hab.:  Brisbane  River,  Moreton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  r.  Mueller,  and  others. 

Some  specimen;;  are  very  difficult  to  distinguish  from  the  narrow. leaved  one?-,  of  A.  tioccosa  : 
others,  come  near  to  the  longer-leaved  ones  of  A.  letlifolia.  llenth. 


782 


LXI.  ARALIACEvE. 


[Astrotricha . 


4.  A.  lerlifolia  (Ledum-leaved),  PC.  Mem.  Omhell.  80  t.  6,  and  Prod.  iv.  74  ; 
I ie/ith.  PI.  Aitxtr.  iii.  880.  A more  slender  shrub  than  A.  floccasa , with  virgate 
branches  covered  as  well  as  the  inflorescence  and  under  side  of  the  leaves  with  a 
close  or  iloccose  tomentum.  Leaves  oblong-linear  or  narrow-linear,  obtuse  or 
rarely  almost  acute,  1 to  Bin.  long,  glabrous  above,  the  margins  recurved  or 
revolute.  Panicle  smaller  and  narrower  than  in  A.  iloccosa.  Flowers  and  fruit 
the  same  as  in  that  species. — Bolax  ledifoliu *,  Sieb.  PI.  Exs.;  A.  hoveoides,  A. 
Cuun.;  Benth.  in  Hueg.  Enum.  55  (with  short  leaves) ; A.  linearis,  A.  C'unn.; 
Benth.  l.c.  (with  long  narrow  leaves)  ; A.  asperi folia,  F.  v.  M.;  Ivlatt  in  Linmea, 
xxix.  709  (with  long  leaves). 

Hab.:  Southern  localities. 

Var.  glalniflora,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  vii.  14S.  Shrub  10ft.  high.  Leaves  attaining  the  length  o( 
bin.  l’anicle  elongate,  glabrous.  Hab.:  Near  Rockhampton,  P.  O'Shanesy  (F.  v.  M.) 

5.  A.  Biddulphiana  (after  Mrs.  H.  Biddulph),  F.  v.  M.  Viet.  Nat.  Pec. 
1890.  A shrub  of  about  6ft.,  branchlets  terete,  densely  covered  by  a close  light- 
brown  stellate  tomentum.  Leaves  somewhat  crowded,  narrow  to  broadish-linear, 
about  2in.  long,  sometimes  scarcely  over  a line  broad,  glabrous  on  the  upper, 
toinentose  like  the  branchlets  on  the  under  surface,  the  midrib  alone  showing  ; 
margins  slightly  recurved  ; apex  obtuse  or  very  slightly  apiculate ; petiole  very 
short.  Panicle  6 to  9in.  long,  glabrous.  Umbels  not  very  numerous  ; peduncles 
very  slender  and  rather  long.  Pedicels  filiform,  J to  Jin.  long  ; involucral  bracts 
very  small,  almost  semi-lanceolate.  Flowers  purplish-black.  Calyx-lobes  minute 
deltoid;  breadth  of  petals  quite  half  their  length;  anthers  greyish.  Ripe  fruit 
nearly  Jin.  long,  about  ovate-ellipsoid,  contracted  at  the  commissure,  otherwise 
turgid,  terminated  by  the  denticulated  short  calyx-limb,  the  two  fruitlets 
spontaneously  seceding,  on  transverse  section  almost  semi-cylindric,  the  com- 
missural side  broad  and  nearly  flat,  between  which  and  the  seed- bearing  cavity 
through  intrusion  of  the  endocarp  2 accessory  small  tubular  cells  formed  either 
hollow  or  filled  with  substance  similar  to  the  albumen,  but  perfectly  closed, 
although  placed  close  to  the  commissure.  Seed  concave-convex,  the  sudden 
prominence  along  the  inner  side  as  extensive  as  the  width  of  the  seed  ; albumen 
equable. — F.  v.  M.  l.c. 

Hab.:  Near  Mount  Playfair.  Mrs.  H.  Biddulph. 


6.  MOTHERWELLIA,  F.  v.  M. 

(After  Dr.  -J.  B.  Motherwell.) 

Flowers  polygamous.  Calyx  compressed-campanulate,  repand  quinque-crenate 
on  the  edge.  Petals  5,  ovate-lanceolate,  the  base  truncate,  distinctly  imbricate 
before  expansion,  long  cohering  in  a calyptra.  Stamens  5,  alternating  with  the 
petals,  upright  in  the  bud;  filaments  very  short.  Anthers  dorsifixed,  2-celled. 
introrse,  oblong-ovate.  Styles  united  in  a subulate-conical  one.  Fruit  2-eelled, 
2-seeded,  broad  rotund-compressed,  not  winged ; pericarp  somewhat  fleshy  ; 
endocarp  crustaceous-brown.  Albumen  not  always  uniform.  Embryo  minute, 
ovate,  near  the  hilurn. — Woody  climber,  trifoliolate,  or  reduced  to  1 leaflet. 
Leaflets  entire.  Umbels  solitary.  Pedicels  articulate  xvitb  the  calyx. 

1.  IVT , haplosciadea  (single- umbelled),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  vii.  107.  Plant 
glabrous.  Branches  striate.  Petioles  J to  2Jin.  long,  with  stipular  dilatations 
at  the  base.  Leaflets  on  slender  petiolules  of  about  8 lines,  ovate  or  lanceolate- 
ovate,  equilateral,  chartaceous,  entire,  sometimes  repand,  2 to4in.  long,  1J  to  2in. 
broad.  Peduncles  articulate  near  the  upper  end.  Pedicels  about  20  in  the 
umbel,  3 to  8 lines  long,  thin-filiform,  rigid.  Calyx  about  H line  long.  Petals 
seceding,  calyptra-like,  scarcely  1J  line  long.  Filaments  short.  Style  persistent. 


Motherwellia.} 


LXI.  ARALIACE.E. 


788 


Fruit  about  8 lines  long,  4 lines  broad,  slightly  laterally  compressed.  Pyrenes 
ovate-sennorbieulate,  compressed.  Seeds  scarcely  1+  line,  oblique,  broadly  ovate, 
much  compressed. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  ■/.  Dallachy  (F.  v.  M.  l.c.) 


7.  PANAX,  Linn. 

(From  supposed  medicinal  virtues  of  the  plants.) 

(Nothopanax,  Miq.) 

Calyx- border  usually  slightly  prominent,  truncate  or  shortly  5-toothed.  Petals 
5,  valvate,  often  cohering  at  the  tips,  especially  in  female  flowers.  Stamens  5. 
Disk  broad  and  not  thick,  the  margin  sometimes  prominent.  Ovary  2 or  rarely 
8-celled.  Styles  2,  rarely  3,  at  first  erect  and  sometimes  cohering,  afterwards 
distinct  and  recurved.  Fruit  flattened,  the  endocarp  hardened  into  2 distinct 
pyrenes  not  furrowed,  sometimes  2-ribbed  on  the  dorsal  edge,  the  exocarp  more 
or  less  succulent.  Albumen  even. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  pinnately  or 
digitately  compound  or  rarely  a few  on  the  same  tree  or  bush  undivided. 
Flowers  often  polygamous,  articulate  on  the  pedicels,  in  umbels  or  rarely  in  heads 
or  racemes,  the  umbels  or  racemes  paniculate  or  rarely  solitary. 

The  genus,  if  limited  according  to  the  views  of  Planchon  and  Decaisne,  is  widely  distributed 
over  the  tropical  regions  of  the  Old  World  and  extends  to  New  Zealand,  but  is  not  American, 
and  comprises  Linnaeus’s  P.  fruticoxa  and  others  The  northern  herbaceous  species  of  Linnaeus, 
with  imbricate  petals,  are  united  by  the  same  authors  with  Aralia,  a course  sanctioned  by  A.  Gray 
and  others.  Miquel,  however,  reserves  the  name  of  Panax  for  these  herbaceous  species,  and 
proposes  the  name  of  Nothopanax  for  Planchon  and  Decaisne’s  Panax.  As  the  views  of  the 
latter  authors  will  probably  meet  with  more  general  adoption,  they  are  here  followed.  The  7 
Australian  species,  as  far  as  hitherto  known,  are  all  endemic  (Benth),  six  of  them  being  met 
with  in  Queensland. 

Leaves  pinnate  or  bipinnate.  Flowers  umbellate,  umbels  paniculate  or 
racemose. 

Leaflets  glabrous,  long,  obliquely  lanceolate.  Calyx-teeth  scarcely 


prominent 1.  P.  Murrayi. 

Leaflets  softly  pubescent  underneath,  large,  ovate  or  oblong,  acuminate. 

Calyx-teeth  scarcely  prominent 2.  P.  mollis. 

Leaflets  glabrous,  large,  ovate-lanceolate  or  oblong.  Umbels  few- 

flowered.  numerous.  Calyx-limb  cup-shaped,  truncate 3.  P.  Macgillivrcei. 

Leaflets  glabrous,  mostly  under  Bin.,  ovate-lanceolate  or  linear,  entire 

toothed  or  dissected.  Calyx-limb  very  short,  sinuate-toothed  . . . 4.  P.  sambucifolius. 

Leaves  3-foliolate.  Flowers  sessile,  capitate ; heads  paniculate  or  racemose  5.  P.  cephalobotrys. 
Leaves  pinnate  or  bipinnate.  Flowers  pedicellate,  racemose;  racemes 
paniculate 6.  P.  eleyans. 


1.  P.  Murrayi  (after  P.  Murray),  F.  r.  M.  Fra/jm.  ii.  106;  Benth.  FI. 
Austr.  iii.  381.  “ Koorgarrie,”  Herberton,  J.  F.  Bailey.  A splendid  tree,  the 

trunk  simple  to  the  height  of  50  or  60ft.,  and  then  almost  trichotomously 
branched  (F.  v.  Mueller,  Dallachy).  Leaves  simply  pinnate,  often  several  feet 
long  ; leaflets  obliquely  lanceolate,  entire  or  slightly  denticulate,  herbaceous  but 
not  thin,  8 to  6in.  long,  or  when  luxuriant  8 to  10in.,  quite  glabrous.  Umbels 
many- flowered,  pedunculate,  in  racemes  or  divaricately-branched  panicles. 
Calyx-teeth  inconspicuous.  Petals  and  stamens  not  seen.  Fruit  about  2 lines 
broad  ; the  endocarp  not  very  hard. — Xothopanaa-  Murrayi,  Seem.  FI.  Vit.  114. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy : common  on  the  mountain  ranges  of  southern  Queensland. 

Wood  of  alight  colour,  soft  and  light;  would  make  good  lining-boards. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql. 
IVoods  No.  232a  . 


2.  P«  mollis  (indumentum  soft),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  382.  A tall  shrub. 
Leaves  simply  (or  doubly '?)  pinnate  ; leaflets  ovate  ovate-lanceolate  or  oblong, 
acuminate,  6 to  lOin.  long,  glabrous  above,  softly  pubescent  or  villous  under- 


734 


LXI.  ARALIACE&. 


r Panax. 


neath.  Umbels  many- (lowered,  numerous,  in  large  divaricately-branched  panicles, 
the  rbachis  minutely  tomentose.  Calyx-teeth  slightly  and  irregularly  prominent. 
Styles  long  and  slender.  Fruit  about  2 lines  broad,  but  not  seen  quite  ripe. 

Hub.:  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallncliy. 


3.  P.  IVIacgillivraei  (after  -I.  MacGillivray),  Benth.  I<'l.  Anslr.  iii.  382.  A 
small  tree  of  about  20ft.,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  simply  (or  doubly  ?)  pinnate, 
the  rhachis  articulate;  leaflets  shortly  petiolulate,  oval-oblong,  or  ovate-lanceo- 
late, shortly  acuminate,  often  oblique  at  the  base,  0 to  lOin.  long,  thin  and 
membranous  in  our  specimens.  Umbels  few-flowered , in  a large  loose  compound 
panicle  with  slender  branches  and  pedicels.  Calyx-limb  prominently  cup-shaped, 
truncate  or  slightly  sinuate-toothed.  Petals  rather  long  and  narrow.  Fruits 
about  3 lines  broad,  very  Hat,  the  carpels  often  readily  separating,  each  with  a 
thin  exocarp,  and  a Hat  smooth  hard  endocarp. — linthn/ianii.r  Mact/illirrai/i,  Seem. 
FI.  Vit.  114. 

Hal).:  Cape  York,  M'diUivniy  : Albany  Island.  II  . Hill. 

1.  P.  sambucifolius  (Elder-leaved),  67*7/.  in  DC.  Prod,  iii.  255;  Benth. 
I'/.  Anslr.  iii.  382.  A tall  shrub  or  tree,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  simply  or 
doubly  pinnate  ; leaHets  exceedingly  variable,  most  commonly  distant,  petiolulate 
or  sessile,  ovate  elliptical  or  lanceolate,  H to  3in.  long,  acute,  entire,  denticulate 
or  lobed.  the  lowest  of  the  simply  pinnate  leaf,  or  the  lowest  of  each  pinna  often 
smaller,  broader,  and  close  to  the  base,  but  sometimes  the  leaHets  divided,  or 
narrow-linear  and  pinnatifid  with  divaricate  distant  lobes,  the  rhachis  sometimes 
dilated  and  as  broad  as  the  lobes.  Umbels  many-flowered  in  a terminal  branched 
corymbose  panicle  or  in  a simple  raceme.  Calyx-limb  shortly  prominent,  dilated, 
very  shortly  sinuate-toothed.  Petals  in  the  perfect  flowers  often  cohering  at  the 
tips,  smaller  and  more  spreading  in  the  males.  Fruit  2 to  3 lines  broad,  with  a 
white  or  lead-coloured  succulent  exocarp,  the  endocarps  or  pyrenes  flat  with 
2 obtuse  dorsal  ribs. — P.  ani/ustifolius  and  V.  (lend  routes,  F.  v.  M.  in  Trans.  Phil. 
Inst.  Viet.  i.  4 2,  and  PI.  Viet.  t.  28;  Xothopana.r  minbucifolius,  Seem.  FI.  Vit.  115. 

Hub.:  Mountains  of  southern  Queensland. 

The  specimens  with  narrow  much-dissected  leaves  are  so  very  unlike  the  others  or  even  any 
Pan  i.r  that  A.  Cunningham  had  distributed  them  under  the  name  of  Tracliymene  pinnata.  The 
manner,  however,  in  which  the  various  forms  of  leaflets  are  combined,  even  on  the  same 
specimens,  show  that  all  belong  to  one  species.-  Benth. 

5.  P.  cephalobotrys  (flower-heads  in  bunches),  /•'.  r.  M.  Fratpn.  ii.  83;  Benth. 
FI.  A list  r.  iii.  382.  Shrubby,  somewhat  climbing,  glabrous  except  the  inflores- 
cence, or  the  young  branches  and  petioles  sprinkled  with  a few  appressed  hairs. 
Leaves  on  long  slender  petioles,  with  3 petiolulate  leaflets,  oblong  or  lanceolate, 
acuminate,  3 to  4in.  long.  Flowers  sessile,  in  small  pedunculate  heads,  forming 
a simple  raceme  or  a slender  slightly-branched  panicle  scarcely  exceeding  the 
leaves.  Petals  and  stamens  not  seen.  Young  fruit  broadly  ovate,  compressed, 
crowned  by  the  short  cup-shaped,  obtusely  5-lobed  calyx-limb.  Disk  with  the 
margin  slightly  prominent.  Styles  rather  long. 

Hub.:  Southern  localities. 

This  and  the  following  species  differ  from  the  rest  of  the  genus  in  inflorescence,  but  the 
flowers  and  fruits  appear  to  be  otherwise  entirely  those  of  Panax. — Bentli. 

6.  P.  elegans  (handsome),  F.  r.  M.  in  Trans.  Phil.  Inst.  Vic.  ii.  68 ; 
Benth.  VI.  Anstr.  iii.  383.  Mowbulan  Whitewood.  “ Greyanger,”  Bunya 
Mountains,  V.  M.  Ii.  A large  and  handsome  tree,  glabrous  except  the  inflorescence. 
Leaves  large,  simply  or  doubly  pinnate,  the  rhachis  articulate.  Leaflets  petiolate, 
opposite,  ovate,  acuminate,  entire,  coriaceous,  shining,  often  3 to  4in.  long. 
Flowers  singly  pedicellate  in  little  racemes,  which  are  very  numerous  and 
arranged  in  a large  terminal  divaricately-branched  panicle,  the  rhachis  minutely 


Panax.] 


LXT.  ARALIACEyE. 


735 


hoary-pubescent.  Calyx-border  shortly  prominent,  entire.  Petals  and  styles  of 
the  genus.  Disk  not  prominent.  Fruits  about  3 lines  broad,  the  endocarp  or 
pyrenes  hard.  -Xothupana.e  eler/ans,  Seem.  FI.  Yit.  114. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay ; Rockhampton  and  Edgecombe  Bay,  Dallachy : Brisbane  River, 
Moveton  Bay,  A.  Cunningham,  F.  r.  Mueller,  C.  Moore. 

Wood  soft,  light  and  elastic;  might  suit  for  cricket  bats;  excellent,  for  lining-boards;  will 
probably  prove  a most  useful  wood  for  the  musical-instrument  maker. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  W oods 
No.  233. 

8.  HEPTAPLEURUM,  Gajrtn. 

(Referring  to  the  seven  petiolules.) 

(Paratropia,  Blame.) 

Calyx-teeth  minute  or  inconspicuous.  Petals  5 or  G,  or  rarely  more,  valvate. 
Stamens  as  many  as  petals.  Disk  flat  or  convex.  Ovary  with  5 or  6,  rarely 
more  cells.  Styles  united  in  a short  cone,  with  as  many  sessile  scarcely  promi- 
nent stigmas  as  cells.  Fruit  nearly  globular,  the  endocarp  not  very  hard,  forming 
5 or  G,  rarely  more,  1 -seeded  pyrenes. — Trees  or  tall  shrubs.  Leaves  digitately 
compound.  Flowers  mostly  unisexual,  not  articulate  on  the  pedicel,  umbellate, 
the  umbels  arranged  in  terminal  panicles  or  racemes. 

A considerable  genus  dispersed  over  tropical  and  eastern  temperate  Asia,  the  only  Australian 
species  being  one  which  has  the  widest  range  in  East  India. 

1.  H.  venulosum  (veiny),  Seem.  Journ.  But.  iii.  80  ; 1 tenth.  FI.  Austr.  iii. 
384.  A tall  shrub  or  tree,  quite  glabrous.  Leaflets  5 to  7,  on  long  petiolules, 
mostly  elliptical  or  oval-oblong,  acuminate,  4 to  Sin.  long,  but  in  some  Indian 
specimens  short  and  obtuse,  coriaceous,  somewhat  shining,  the  pinnate  veins  and 
reticulate  veinlets  very  prominent.  Stipules  adnate  to  the  petiole  at  the  base 
only,  united  within  it  into  a single  obtuse  lamina.  Umbels  in  a divaricately 
branched  panicle  shorter  than  the  leaves.  Male  flowers  with  exserted  stamens 
and  scarcely  any  rudiment  of  the  ovary.  Females  often  with  more  or  less  perfect 
stamens.  Parts  of  the  flowers  5 or  G.  Fruit  about  2 lines  diameter. — Paratropia 
random,  W.  and  Arn.  Prod.  377  ; Wight,  Illustr.  t.  118  ; F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  iv. 
121  ; Araiitt  Moored,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  10-1. 

Hab.:  Wide  Bay,  C.  Moore. 

The  species  is  widely  dispersed  over  E.  India. 


9.  BRASSAIA,  Endl. 

Calyx-tube  broad,  adnate  to  the  ovary,  without  any  prominent  border.  Petals 
7 to  18,  usually  about  12,  valvate,  usually  cohering  at  the  apex.  Stamens  as 
many  as  petals.  Disk  not  thick,  broad,  with  as  many  radiating  furrows  as  cells, 
and  confluent  with  the  slightly  raised  styles  or  base  of  the  radiating  stigmas. 
Ovary  with  as  many  cells  as  parts  of  the  flower  and  stigmas.  Fruit  with  as 
many  1-seeded  laterally  compressed  pyrenes  as  cells  of  the  ovary. — -Trees.  Leaves 
digitately  compound.  Flowers  sessile  in  little  dense  heads,  shortly  pedunculate 
in  long  racemes,  each  flower  embedded  in  a cup-shape  involucre  of  4 small 
imbricate  bracts. 

The  genus  is  limited  to  a single  species,  endemic  in  Australia. 

1.  B.  actinophylla  (rayed  leaflets),  F.tuU,  Nor.  Stirp.  Per.  89;  Benth.  FI. 
Amtr.  iii.  385.  A handsome  tree,  attaining  40ft.,  quite  glabrous.  Leaflets  7 to 
1G,  petiolulate,  oblong  or  obovate-oblong,  very  shortly  acuminate,  coriaceous, 
entire,  Gin.  to  1ft.  long.  Stipules  united  in  a single  interpetiolar  stipule,  adnate 
to  the  peLiole  at  the  base.  Flower-heads  scarcely  above  Ain.  diameter,  on 
peduncles,  sometimes  very  short,  rarely  4 to  lin.  long,  rather  numerous  along  the 


736 


LXI.  ARALIACEiE. 


[Brassaia. 


stout  rhachis  of  the  racemes,  which  attain  sometimes  several  feet,  and  are  often 
several  together  at  the  end  of  the  branch,  each  one  subtended  by  long  acuminate 
leafless  stipules. — F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  108,  iv.  121  ; Seem.  -Journ.  Bot.  ii.  213. 

Hab.:  Endeavour  River,  Banks  and  Solander,  A.  Cunningham ; Cape  York,  IV.  Hill ; Palm 
Island,  Home  ; Port  Molle,  Fitzalan;  Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy  ; Boyd  River,  C.  Moore. 

Wood  soft,  close-grained,  and  dark. — Bailey's  Cat.  Ql.  Woods  No.  235. 


10.  HEDERA,  Linn. 

(Old  Latin  name  for  the  Ivy.) 

(Irvingia,  F.  v.  .1/.;  Kissodendron,  Seem.) 

Calyx-border  slightly  prominent,  entire  or  sinuate-toothed.  Petals  5,  valvate. 
Stamens  5.  Disk  convex,  sometimes  very  prominent,  Ovary  5-celled.  Styles 
united  into  an  obtuse  cone  or  very  short  cylindrical  style,  with  5 scarcely 
prominent  stigmas.  Fruit  nearly  globular,  with  5 1-seeded  pyrenes.  Seed  with 
a furrowed  or  ruminated  albumen. — Woody  climbers  or  trees.  Leaves  entire, 
lobed  or  pinnately  compound.  Flowers  umbellate,  not  articulate  on  the  pedicel, 
the  umbels  pedunculate  on  terminal  panicles. 

The  gcuus,  characterised  essentially  by  the  ruminated  albumen,  contains  besides  the  Australian 
species,  which  is  endemic,  one  widely  dispersed  over  the  northern  hemisphere  in  the  Old  World, 
and  probably  some  other  Asiatic  ones  as  yet  insufficiently  investigated. — Benth. 

1.  H.  australiana  (Australian),  F.  r.  M.  Fragm.  iv.  120;  Benth.  FI.  Austr. 
iii.  384.  A small  tree,  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  large,  pinnate,  the  rhachis 
articulate ; leaflets  few,  ovate,  oval-oblong  or  ovate-lanceolate,  shortly  acuminate, 
often  above  Gin.  long,  smooth  and  shining,  but  prominently  veined  almost  as  in 
Heptapleurum  venulosum.  Umbels  pedunculate,  with  the  peduncles  almost  verti- 
cillate  along  the  elongated  branches  of  a large  loose  terminal  panicle.  Calyx- 
border  slightly  sinuate-toothed.  Disk  broadly  conical,  though  not  quite  so 
thick  as  in  H.  helix.  Style  very  shortly  cylindrical  or  reduced  to  a small  boss  on 
the  centre  of  the  disk.  Drupe  above  2 lines  diameter,  with  5 hard  pyrenes, 
enclosing  a seed  with  a deeply  ruminate  surface. — Irvingia  australiana , F.  v.  M. 
Fragm.  v.  19  ; Kissodendron  australianum,  Seem.  Journ.  Bot.  iii.  201. 

Hab.:  Herbert  River,  I.  v.  Mueller ; Rockingham  Bay,  Dallachy. 

The  semisuperior  appearance  of  the  ovary  of  Hedera  helix  is  due  to  the  thickness  of  the 
epigynous  disk,  and  the  only  character  remaining  to  separate  H.  australiana  generically  from  it 
is  the  compound  foliage,  which  can  scarcely  be  admitted  in  an  Order  where  it  is  so  peculiarly 
variable. — Benth. 


Order  LXIL  CORNACE®. 

Calyx-tube  adnate  to  the  ovary ; limb  forming  a raised  border,  entire  or  with 
as  many  teeth  as  petals.  Petals  4,  5,  or  rarely  more,  valvate  in  the  bud,  inserted 
round  an  epigynous  disk  or  on  the  calyx-border,  rarely  wanting.  Stamens  as 
many  or  rarely  twice  as  many  as  the  petals,  and  inserted  with  them  ; anthers 
with  parallel  cells  opening  longitudinally.  Ovary  inferior,  1 or  2-celled,  with  1 
anatropous  pendulous  ovule  in  each  cell  ; style  simple,  with  a terminal  entire  or 
rarely  lobed  stigma.  Fruit  an  indehiscent  drupe,  with  a 1 or  2-celled  nucleus. 
Seeds  solitary,  pendulous,  with  a fleshy  albumen  and  thin  testa;  embryo  straight, 
nearly  as  long  as  thg.  albumen,  the  radicle  superior  and  shorter  than  the  flat 
cotyledons. — Trees,  shrubs,  or  very  rarely  herbs.  Leaves  opposite  or  rarely 
alternate,  entire  or  slightly  lobed,  without  stipules.  Flowers  usually  small,  in 
axillary  or  terminal  heads,  cymes,  or  corymbose  panicles. 

A small  Order,  generally  scattered  over  the  globe,  but  most  abundant  in  the  temperate  regions 
of  the  northern  hemisphere.  It  is  represented  in  Australia  by  a single  genus  common  to  tropical 
Asia  and  Africa,  and  belonging  to  the  small  section  of  Alangiea,  differing  in  alternate  leaves  and 
in  some  other  respects  from  the  majority  of  the  Order.—  Benth. 


LXII.  CORNACE.E. 


737 


1.  MARLEA,  Roxb. 

(An  Indian  name  of  one  of  the  genus.) 

(Rhytidandra,  A.  Gray  : l'seudalangium,  F.  v.  M.) 

Calyx-limb  minutely  toothed.  Petals  narrow-linear.  Stamens  the  same 
number  as  petals,  the  filaments  adhering  to  the  petals  at  the  base  and  connecting 
them  in  an  apparently  tubular  corolla ; anthers  adnate,  long  and  linear.  Ovary 
1 or  2-celled  ; style  filiform,  with  a 2 or  1-lobed  or  capitate  stigma.  Drupe 
often  reduced  to  1 cell  and  seed. — Trees  or  shrubs.  Leaves  alternate.  Flowers 
in  axillary  cymes. 

Besides  the  Australian  species,  which  is  also  in  the  islands  of  the  South  Pacific,  there  are 
several  others  in  tropical  Asia  and  Africa. — Bentli. 

1.  IVI.  vitiensis  (of  Viti),  Benth.  FI.  Austr.  iii.  38b.  A tree,  attaining  a 
considerable  height,  glabrous  or  the  young  branches  pubescent  or  villous.  Leaves 
ovate,  ovate-lanceolate,  or  oblong,  shortly  acuminate,  more  or  less  oblique  and 
unequal  at  the  base  or  rarely  equal,  3 to  5in.  long,  glabrous  or  slightly  pubescent 
underneath  in  the  normal  form.  Flowers  in  short  axillary  cymes  on  slender 
peduncles,  rarely  much  exceeding  the  petioles.  Calyx-limb  cup-shaped,  about 
§ line  diameter.  Petals  4 to  6,  varying  in  length  from  4 to  6 lines,  connected 
by  the  stamens  up  to  from  J to  A their  length,  revolute  at  the  ends.  Filaments 
villous ; anthers  about  the  length  of  the  corolla,  the  valves  involute,  dividing  each 
cell  into  2 before  they  open  and  marked  with  transverse  constrictions,  which  give 
them  the  appearance  of  being  chambered.  Disk  cup-shaped,  enclosing  the  base 
of  the  style.  Style  divided  at  the  end  into  2 linear  stigmatic  lobes.  Ovary 
1 -celled  with  1 ovule.  Drupe  ovoid,  about  iin.  long. — Rhytidandra  vitiensis,  A. 
Gray,  Bot.  Amer.  Expl.  Exped.  i.  303  t.  28,  and  in  Proc.  Amer.  Acad.  vi.  55  ; 
Pseudolangium  pohjosmoides,  F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  84  ; Rhi/tiiUnuIra  polyosuioides, 
F.  v.  M.  Fragm.  ii.  176. 

Hab.:  Rockingham  Bay  and  Herberton  district  (both  forms),  J.  F.  Bailey. 

The  apparently  chambered  anthers  are  not  really  so,  and  traces  of  the  constrictions  may  often 
be  seen  in  M.  begonifolia,  the  latter  differs  also  in  the  large  thick  disk,  the  *2-celled  ovary,  and 
shortly  4-lobed  style;  but  M.  barbata  has  the  thick  disk  with  a 1-celled  ovary  and  2-lobed  style, 
and  an  unpublished  Malayan  species  has  a small  disk,  with  a 1-celled  ovary,  and  almost  entire 
style,  all  these  distinctions  proving  thus  to  be  specific,  not  generic. — Benth. 

Var.  tomentosa.  Musk-wood.  “ Cartalogoor,”  Herberton,  J.  F.  Bailey.  Softly  villous  all 
over,  or  the  upper  side  of  the  leaves  alone  glabrous.  Flowers  villous,  the  petals  more  deeply 
free  than  usual.—  Fitzroy  River.  l'hozet : Rockhampton,  DaUaclnj  ; Moreton  Bay.  W.  Hill.  The 
wood  of  the  variety  is  of  a yellow  colour  towards  the  bark,  but  a large  portion  of  the  centre-wood 
is  brownish-black ; close  in  grain,  and  when  freshly  cut  has  a somewhat  Musk-like  fragrance  ; 
an  excellent  wood  for  cabinet-work.  Bailey's  Cat.  QI.  Woods  No.  237. 


' 


; 


■ 


. 


. 


INDEX  OF  GENERA  AND  SPECIES 


The  synonyms  and  species  incidentally  mentioned  are  printed  in  italics. 


Page 


Abrophyllum  . . . . 533 

ornans,  Hook.  f.  . . 533 
Abrus  . . . . . . 420 

paucijiorus,  Desv.  . . 420 
preeatorius,  Linn.  . . 420 
squamulosus,  E.  Mey.  ..  420 
Acacia  . . . . . . 473 

dbieiina,  Willd.  . . 491 
adenophora,  Spreng.  . . 515 
adunca,  A.  Cunn.  ..  491 
amblygona,  A.  Cunn.  ..  493 
amoena,  Wendt.  . . 489 
anceps,  Hook.  . . . . 499 

aneura,  V . v.  M.  . . 505 
angnlata,  Desv.  . . 515 
angustifolia,  Lodd.  ..  504 
angustifolia,  Wendl.  ...  490 
arcuata,  Sieb.  ...  . . 498 

armata,  R.  Br.  ..  . . 485 

Arundelliana,  Bail.  ..  515 
aulaeocarpa,  A.  Cunn.  511 

auriculiformis,  A.  Cunn.  512 
basaltica,  F.  v.  M.  ...  518 
Bakeri,  Maid.  . . . . 500 

Baueri,  Benth.  ..  ..  484 

Rid  willi,  [tenth . ..  510 

binervata,  DC.  ..  ..  500 

botrycephala,  Desf.  . . 514 
brevifolia,  Benth.  . . 503 
brevifolia,  Lodd.  . . 492 
bruniades,  A.  Cunn.  ..  484 
buxifolia,  A.  Cunn.  ..  491 
Bynoeana,  Benth.  . . 483 
calamifolia,  Sweet  . . 483 
Caleyi,  A.  Cunn.  ..  492 
calyeulata,  A.  Cunn.  ..  511 
Chisholmi,  Bail.  . . 502 
chrysobotrys,  Meissn.  . . 514 
cibaria,  F.  v.  M.  . . 505 
cineinnata,  F.  v.  M.  . . 513 
cinerascens,  Sieb.  . . 509 
complanata,  A.  Cunn.  ..  499 
conferta,  A.  Cunn.  ..  484 
eonspersa,  F.  v.  AI.  . . 507 
coriacea,  DC.  . . . . 490 

crassicarpa,  A.  Cunn.  ..  511 
crassiuscula,  Wendl.  ...  491 
cultriformis,  A.  Cunn.  493 

Cunninghamii,  Hook.  509 

eyperophylla,  F.  v.  M.  505 

Daintreana,  F.  v.  M.  ...  499 
dasyphylla,  A.  Cunn.  ..  485 


Page 


dealbata,  Link  . . ..515 

dealbata,  A.  Cunn.  ...  492 
decora,  Reiclib.  . . ...  491 

decurrens,  Willd.  . . 514 

delibrata,  A.  Cunn.  ..  507 
dictyophleba,  F.  v.  M.  497 

Dietrichiana,  F.  v.  M.  490" 

dimidiata,  Benth.  ..  513 
discolor,  Willd.  . . 514 

doratoxylon,  A.  Cunn.  507 
drepanocarpa,  F.  v.  31.  500 

echinula,  DC.  ..  ...  482 

elata,  Roxb.  . . . . 519 

elongata,  Sieb.  . . . . 494 

exeelsa,  Benth.  ..  ..  499 

falcata,  Willd.  . . . . 487 

falcinella,  Tausch.  . . 492 
farnesiana,  Willd.  . . 510 
fasciculifera,  F.  v.  M . . 487 
fiavescens,  A.  Cunn.  ..  501 
Fraseri,  Hook.  ...  ..  492 

furcifera,  Lindl.  . . 485 
furfuracea,  (Jr.  Don  ...  492 
galioides,  Benth.  ...  484 

georginoe,  Bail.  . . . . 495 

glauceseens,  Willd.  . . 509 
glutinosa,  F.  v.  M.  . . 497 

Gnidium,  Benth.  ..  480 

gonocarpa,  F.  v.  M.  . . 500 
gonoelada,  F.  v.  M.  . . 503 
hakeoides,  A.  Cunn.  ..  489 
harpophylla,  F.  v.  M.  . . 499 
hebecepliala,  A Cunn.  494 
hispidula,  Willd.  . . 485 
holcocarpa,  Benth.  ...  510 
holoserieea,  A.  Cunn.  ..  512 
homaloclada,  F.  r.  31.  . . 500 
homalophylla,  A.  Cunn.  495 
homomalla , Wendl.  . . 509 
humifusa,  A.  Cunn.  ..  512 
imbricata,  F.  v.  M.  . . 485 
implexa,  Benth.  ..  498 
impressa,  F.  v.  31 . . . 494 

impressa,  Lindl.  . . 488 
irrorata,  Sieb.  ..  ..  515 

ixiophylla,  Bentli.  ..  497 

julifera,  Benth.  . . 508 
juncifolia,  Bentli.  ..  483 

juniperina,  Willd.  ..  482 

Kempeana,  F.  v.  31.  . . 507 

lanigera,  A.  Cunn.  ..  481 
latifolia,  Benth.  ..  512 


Page 


Leichhardtii.  Benth.  ..  491 
lenticellata,  F.  v.  M.  . . 5115 
leptoearpa,  A.  Cunn.  ..  510 
leptoclada,  A.  Cunn.  ..  515 
leptophylla,  F.  v.  M.  . . 482 
leptostachya,  Benth.  . . 508 
leucadendron.  A.  Cunn.  509 
leucophylla,  Lindl.  ..  496 
ligiilata,  A.  Cunn.  . . 489 
linarioides,  Benth.  . . 502 
linearis,  Sims  . . . . 504 

lineata,  A.  Cunn.  ..  485 

linifolia,  Willd.  . . 490 
longilolia,  Willd.  . . 504 
longissima,  Wendl.  ..  505 
lunata,  Sieb.  . . . . 492 

lycopodifolia,  A.  Cunn.  483 
lysiphloea,  F.  v.  31.  . . 502 

macradenia,  Benth.  ..  487 
Maideni,  F.  b.  31.  . . 509 

Mangium,  Willd.  ..  513 

niaritima,  Benth  . . 514 
melaleucoides,  Bail.  . . 517 
melanoxylon,  R.  Br.  . . 498 
mollissima,  Willd.  ..  515 
multinerina,  DC.  . . 481 
Miu  rayana,  F.  v.  M.  . . 490 
myrtifolia,  Willd.  . . 493 
neriifolia,  A.  Cunn.  ..  488 
Nernstii,  F.  v.  M.  . . 494 
neuroearpa,  A.  Cunn.  ..  512 
ole ee folia.  A.  Cunn.  ..  492 
oraria,  F.  v.  31.  . . 501 

nrthocarpa,  F.  v.  M.  . . 506 
Oswaldi,  F.  v.  31.  . . 496 

pendula,  A.  Cunn.  ..  490 
penninervis,  Sieb.  . . 488 
Pence,  F.  v.  M. . . . . 481 

phleboearpa,  F.  r.  31.  . . 481 
piliyera,  A.  Cunn.  ..  486 
pinifolia,  Benth.  . . 483 
pityoides,  F.  v.  31.  . . 505 

plagiophylla , Spreng.  . . 487 
plagiophylla,  F.  v.  31...  480 
platycarpa,  F.  v.  M.  . . 501 
plectocarpa,  A.  Cunn.  ..  501 
podalyriffil’olia,  A.  Cunn.  49*2 
polybotrya,  Benth.  . . 514 
polystachya,  A.  Cunn...  510 
prai'ifnlia,  F.  v.  M.  ..  493 
procera,  Willd.  ..  ..  519 

pugioniformis,  Wendl. . . 483 


11 


TNDFX  OF  GENERA  A NO  SPFCIFS. 


pnlrernlenta . A.  Cunn. 

Page 

483 

pungens , Spreng. 

482 

quadr  Hater  alls,  DC. 

483 

ltothii,  Bail. 

500 

riincifonuix,  A.  Cunn. .. 

485 

s&licina,  Lindl. . . 

488 

xeapuliformi *,  A.  Cunn. 

493 

sentis.  F.  r.  M. 

487 

sericata,  A.  Cvnn. 

501 

xetigera,  A.  Cunn. 

48(5 

Sicberiana,  Seheele 

514 

Sieberiana,  Tausch. 

401 

Simsii,  .1.  Cunn. 

405 

Solandri,  Benth. 

508 

Sophoret,  li.  Hr. 

504 

spectabilis,  A.  Cunn.  .. 

514 

stenophj’lla,  A.  Cunn  ... 

107 

stipuligera,  /■'.  v.  M . . 

503 

"■“fcuaveolens,  U'illd. 

400 

sublaiiata,  Benth. 

403 

xulcipes,  Sieb.  . . 

515 

Sutherlandi,  F.  r.  M.  ... 

517 

tetragooophylla,  F.v.  M. 

482 

Thozetiana,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

518 

torulosa,  Benth. 

507 

translucens,  A.  Cunn.  .. 

404 

triptera,  Benth. 

481 

umbellata,  A.  Cunn.  .. 

503 

umbrosa,  A.  Cunn. 

500 

uncifera,  Benth. 

402 

uncinata , Lodd. 

486 

undulifolia.  A.  Cunn.  .. 

48(5 

venulosa,  Benth. 

498 

veriicillata,  Sieb. 

482 

Victories,  Benth. 

487 

viscidula,  A.  Cunn. 

497 

Wiekhami,  Benth. 

502 

xylocarpa,  A.  Cunn. 

500 

Acsena 

528 

Beliriana,  Schlecht. 

529 

echi nnta,  Nees  . . 

529 

montevidensix,  Hook.  f. 

529 

ovina,  A.  Cunn. 

529 

sanguisorbee.  Vahl. 

529 

xarmentosa , Carmich.  . . 

520 

Ackama 

540 

Muelleri,  Benth. 

540 

Acmenu 

floribundtt , DC.  . . 

057 

Kingii,  G.  Don 

057 

Actinotus 

720 

Gibbonsii,  F.  v.  M. 

721 

Helianthi,  Labi II. 

721 

minor,  Benth.  . . 

721 

Adambea 

glabra,  Rheede  . . 

078 

Adenanthera,  Linn. 

471 

abrosperma,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

471 

pavonina,  Linn. 

471 

jEsehynomene 

100 

americana,  Linn. 

407 

cachemiriana,  Camb.  .. 

407 

coluteoides,  A.  Rich. 

400 

faleata,  DC. 

407 

indica , Linn.  .. 

407 

mierantha,  DC. . . 

107 

Aizelia 

468 

australis,  Bail. 

468 

Page 

Ai/ati 

coccinea,  Desv.  . . 

898 

formoea,  F.  v.  M. 

398 

grandijlora,  Desv. 

398 

Agonis 

580 

lysicephala,  F.  e.  M.  anil 

Bail 

580 

Scortechiniana,  F.  v.  .1/ . 

587 

Aizoon 

700 

quadrifidum,  F.  v.  .V.  . . 

707 

zygophylloides,  F.  v.  .1/ 

707 

Albizzia 

517 

basal  lica  .Benth. 

518 

eanesccns,  Benth. 

519 

Lebbcck,  Benth. 

517 

procera , Benth. .. 

518 

Sutherlandi,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

517 

Thozetiana.  /•’.  v.  M.  . . 

518 

Toona , Bail. 

517 

Tozeri,  F.  v.  M. 

521 

Vidro  vanda 

55 1 

vesiculosa,  Finn. 

551 

Alsomitra  . . 

701 

eapricornica,  /•’.  v.  .1/. . . 

702 

Hookeri,  F.  v.  .1/. 

702 

Stephensiana,  Cogn.  .. 

702 

suberosa,  Bail.  . . 

702 

Alysiearpus 

418 

cijlindricun,  Desv. 

418 

nummulaneefolim,  DC. 

418 

rugosus,  DC. 

418 

vaginalis,  DC. 

418 

Ammannia 

672 

auriculata,  IV i lid. 

074 

auetralasica,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

074 

diandra,  F.  v.  M. 

073 

illecebroidex,  Arn. 

073 

indica,  Lain. 

074 

multittora,  II orb. 

074 

pentandra,  Bo.rb. 

073 

Rotala,  F.  v.  M. 

073 

trittora,  It.  Br.  . . 

674 

vexicatoria , Roxb. 

674 

Arnini 

725 

majus,  Linn. 

725 

Amphodux 

obatux,  Lindl.  .. 

425 

Ainygdalux 

perxica,  Linn.  . . 

525 

Ancistroxtigina 

cypxeleoielex,  Fenzl 

710 

Angophora.. 

604 

intermedia,  DC. 

605 

lanceolata,  Cav. 

005 

subvelutina,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

605 

velutina,  F.  v.  M. 

605 

Woodxiana , Bail. 

605 

Anopterus 

535 

Macleayanus.  F.  v.  M. 

536 

Aotus 

351 

cordifoliu,  Benth. 

358 

ericoidex,  G.  Don 

352 

ericoides,  Paxt.  . . 

361 

ferruginea,  Labill. 

352 

lanigera,  A.  Cunn. 

352 

mollis,  Benth. 

352 

villosa,  Sm. 

351 

virgata,  DC. 

352 

Aphanopetalum  .. 

Page 
. 5.38 

resinosum,  Emil. 

. 538 

Apium 

. 724 

australe,  Than... 

. 724 

leptophyllum,  F.  v.  ,1/. 

724 

proxtrat uni.  Labill. 

. 724 

Arachis 

. 408 

hypogtea,  Linn. 

. 408 

Alalia 

. 729 

Macdoxvalli,  F.  r.  M.  . 

. 729 

Moorei,  F.  v.  M. 

. 735 

Archidendron 

. 522 

Lucyi,  /•'.  r.  .1/.... 

. 522 

Vaillantii,  F.  v.  M. 

. 522 

Argophyllum 

. 532 

Lejourdanii,  F.  v.  M.  . 

. 532 

nitidum,  Font.... 

. 533 

Axteromyrtm 

Geertneri,  Schau. 

. 599 

Astrotricha 

. 730 

axperifolia,  F.  v.  M. 

. 732 

Biddulphiana,  F.  v.  M. 

732 

Hoccosa.  DC. 

. 731 

hoveoides,  A.  Cunn.  ’ . 

. 732 

ledifolia,  DC.  ... 

. 732 

linearix,  A.  Cunn. 

. 732 

longifolia,  Benth. 

. 731 

pterocarpa.  Benth. 

. 731 

Atylosia 

. 437 

grand i folia,  F.  v.  M.  . 

. 439 

marmorata  Benth. 

. 438 

plurifiora,  F.  v.  M. 

. 439 

reticulata,  Benth. 

. 438 

searalwoides,  Benth.  . 

. 438 

A zorella 

lineanfolia,  Cav. 

. 719 

Baickea 

crenulata,  DC.  . . 

. 584 

densifolia,  Sin.  . . 

. 585 

diosmifolia,  Budge 

. 584 

fasciculate!,  Sieb. 

. 580 

leptoealyx,  F.  v.  M. 

. 583 

linifolia,  Budge. . 

. 584 

microphylla,  Sieb. 

. 582 

.\ovo-anglica,  F.  v.  M. 

580 

phylicoidex,  A.  Cunn.  .. 

. 593 

stenophylla,  F.  v.  ,1/.  . 

. 585 

trichophyllei . Sieb. 

. 584 

umbellata , F.  v.  M. 

. 585 

virgata,  Andr.  .. 

. 585 

Hackhousia 

. 042 

angustifolia,  F.  v.  M.  . 

. 643 

Baneroftii,  Bail,  and  F 

r.  iV 

. 644 

citrifolia,  F.  v.  M. 

. 644 

myrtifolia,  H.  and  II.  . . 

. 643 

riparia.  Hook.  . . 

. 643 

sciadophora,  F.  v.  .V.  ., 

. 643 

Badamia 

eonimerxonii , Gartn. 

566 

Barklya 

449 

syringifolia,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

449 

I'.arringtonia 

, 665 

acutangula,  Gn. 

666 

racemosa,  Gaud. 

666 

speciosa,  Linn. . , 

066 

INDEX  OF  GENERA  AND  SPECIES. 


111 


Bauera 

Page 

. 543 

Billardieri.  D.  Don 

. 543 

capitata,  Ser.  . . 

. 543 

humilis,  Sweet  . . 

. 543 

rubicetolia,  Salisb. 

. 513 

rubioides.  Andr. 

. 543 

Bauhinia 

. 466 

acuminata,  Linn. 

. 466 

Carronii,  F.  v.  M. 

. 467 

Cunninghamii,  Benth. 

. 466 

Hookeri,  F.  v.  M. 

. 467 

monandra,  Kurz 

. 467 

Persichii , F.  v.  M. 

. 468 

Benincasa 

. 694 

vacua,  F.  v.  M. . . 

. (394 

Bolax 

tloccipes,  Sieb. 

. 731 

ledifolia,  Sieb.  . . 

. 732 

Bossisea 

. 363 

Armitii,  F.  v.  M. 

. 366 

Brownii,  Benth. 

. 365 

buxifolia,  A.  Cunn. 

. 365 

carinalis,  Benth. 

. 364 

decumbens,  F.  v.  M. 

. 365 

egena,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

. 368 

ensata,  Sieb. 

. 366 

heterophylla,  Vent. 

. 366 

Innceolata,  Bot.  Mag. 

. 366 

lenticularis,  Lodd. 

. 365 

linnceoides,  G.  Don 

. 364 

nummularia,  Endl. 

. 364 

ovata,  G.  Don  . . 

. 366 

ovata,  Sm. 

. 364 

phylloclada,  F.  v.  M. 

. 366 

prostrata,  R.  Br. 

. 364 

rhombifolia,  Sieb. 

. 365 

rufa,  R.  Br. 

. 366 

rupicola,  A.  Cunn. 

..  364 

Scortechini,  F.  r.  HI. 

. 365 

stenopliylla,  F.  v.  M. 

. 367 

B racliy  nenui 

ornans,  F.  v.  M. 

. 533 

Brachysema 

. 334 

aphyllum,  Hook. 

. 335 

oxylobioides,  Benth. 

. 335 

Brassaia  .. 

. 735 

actinophylla,  Endl. 

. 735 

Bruguiera  ... 

. 335 

australis,  A.  Cunn. 

. 560 

caryophylloides,  Blum 

561 

gymnorhiza,  Lam. 

. 561 

parviflora,  IF.  it-  Arn. 

. 562 

Rheedii,  Blutne . . 

. 561 

Rumphii,  Blume 

. 561 

Bryonia 

. 698 

laciniosa,  Linn. 

..  698 

Bryophyllum 

. 545 

ealycinum,  Salisb. 

. 545 

Bupleurum 

. 723 

rotundifolium,  Linn. 

. 723 

Burgesia 

homalocladu , F v.  M. 

. 335 

Burtonia  . . 

. 342 

foliolosa,  Benth. 

. 343 

subulata,  Benth. 

. 343 

Bvblis 

. 551 

ceerulea,  Planch. 

. 552 

Page 


filifolia.  Planch.  ...  552 
lmiflora,  Salisb.  . . 551 

Caesalpinia  ..  ...  449 

arborea , Zoll.  . . . . 453 

Bonducella.  Ro.vb.  . . 450 
ferruginea,  D.  Dene.  . . 453 
nuga,  Ait,.  ...  ..  450 

pa nieulata , Desf.  ...  450 

sepiaria,  Ro.rb. ...  ..  450 

Callieoma  . . . . . . 53(5 

serratifolia,  Andr.  ..  53(5 
Stutzen,  F.  v.  .1/.  . . 53(5 

Callistachys 

elliptica , Vent.  . . . . 33(5 

Callistemon  . . . . 593 

braebyandrus,  Lindl.  ...  595 
coccineus,  F.  v.  M.  . . 595 
glaucus,  F.  v.  M.  . . 594 
lanceolatus,  DC.  ...  594 
marginatus,  DC.  . . 594 
pallidus,  DC.  . . . . 595 

pithyoid.es,  Miq.  . . 595 
rugulosus,  Miq.  . . 595 

salignus,  DC 595 

sedber,  Lodd.  . . . . 594 

speciosus,  DC.  . . . . 594 

Callitriehe  . . . . 558 

verna , Linn.  ..  ...  558 

Calpurnia 

Lasiogyna,  F.  v.  M.  . . 447 
Calythrix  ..  ...  ..  577 

Baueri,  Schau.  . . 579 
Behriana,  Schlecht  . . 579 
Billardieri,  Schau.  . . 579 
Brownii,  Schau.  . . 579 
brunioides,  A.  Cunn.  ...  579 
cupressifolia,  A.  Rich...  578 
cupressoides,  A.  Rich.  ...  578 
ericoides,  A.  Cunn.  ..  579 
exstipulata,  DC.  . . 578 
glabra,  R.  Br.  . . . . 579 

laricina,  R.  Br.  ...  580 

leptophylla,  Benth.  ...  579 
leucantlia,  Miq.  . . 579 

longifiora,  F.  v.  HI.  ...  578 
inicrophylla,  A.  Cmni...  576 
monticola,  Miq.  . . 579 

Mueller i,  Miq.  . . ...  579 

pubescens,  Sweet  ...  579 

rosea,  Miq.  ...  ..  579 

scabra,  DC.  ...  ..  579 

Schlechtendahlii,  Miq...  579 
squarrosa,  Miq.  . . 579 

tetragona,  Labill.  . . 579 

virgata,  A.  Cunn.  . . 579 

Canavalia  . . . . . . 431 

ensiformis,  DC.  . . 431 
gladiata,  DC.  ..  ..  432 

incurva,  DC.  ...  ..  432 

obtusifolia.  DC.  ..  431 
polystachya,  Schw.  ...  432 
C(  i n tharospermum 
pauciflorum,  W.  A Am.  438 
Carallia  ...  ..  ..  5C2 

integerrima,  DC.  . . 562 

zeylanica,  Arn...  ,.  562 


Page 


Careya  ..  ..  ...  667 

arborca,  Roxb.  ..  ..  667 

australis,  F.  r.  M.  . . 667 
Cariea  . . . . . . 690 

papaya,  Linn.  ...  ..  690 

Casearia  . . 684 

Dallachyi,  F.  v.  M.  . . 685 
esculenta,  Roxb.  . . 684 
Cassia  . . . . . . 453 

Absus,  Linn.  . . . . 463 

acclinis,  F.  v.  M.  . . 459 
alata,  Linn.  . . . . 457 

artemisioides,  Gaud.  . . 461 
australis,  Sims  . . . . 459 

Barclayana,  Sweet  . . 457 
Barrenfieldii , Colla  . . 459 
Brewsteri,  F.  v.  M.  . . 455 
vanaliculatu,  R.  Br.  ..  461 
Chatelainiana,  Gaud.  ..  460 
circinata,  Benth.  . . 460 
concinna,  Benth.  . . 463 
coronilloides,  A.  Cunn. . . 459 
desolata,  F.  v.  M.  ...  462 
eremophila,  A.  Cunn.  ..  461 
Fieldii,  Colla  . . . . 459 

glauea,  Lam.  ...  ..  459 

heteroloba,  Lindl.  . . 461 
laevigata,  Willd.  . . 457 
leptoelada,  Benth.  . . 462 
magnifolia,  F.  v.  M.  . . 458 
mimosoides,  Linn.  ..  464 
notabilis,  F.  v.  M.  . . 458 
occidentalis,  Benth.  . . 456 
oligoclada,  F.  v.  M.  . . 462 
oligophylla,  F.  v.  M.  . . 462 
phyllodinea,  R.  Br.  . . 460 
platypoda,  R.  Br.  . . 461 
pleurocarpa,  F.  v.  M.  . . 458 
pruinosa,  F.  v.  M.  . . 460 
pumila,  Lain.  . . . . 463 

pumila,  F.  v.  M.  ..  464 
retusa,  Roland.  . . . . 459 

Schultesii,  Colla  . . 459 
Sophera,  Linn.  . . 457 
Sturtii,  R.  Br.  . . . . 461 

snffruticosa.  Keen.  ..  459 
tcretifolia,  Lindl.  . . 461 
teretiuscula,  F.  v.  M.  . . 461 
umbellata,  Reichb.  . . 459 
venusta,  F.  v.  HI.  . . 458 
gygophylla,  Benth.  ..  461 
Oastanospermum  . . . . 448 

australe,  A.  Cunn.  ..  448 
Catnppa 

domestica,  Rumph.  ..  566 
sylrestris,  Rumph.  ...  566 
Catharthocarpus 
Brewsten,  F.  v.  M.  . . 455 
Oathnrmion 

monihferum,  Hassk.  . . 520 
Ceratophyllum  . . . . 53y 

Virchowii,  F.  v.  HI.  ..  539 
Cercodia 

erecta,  Murr.  ..  ..  554 

Cereus  703 

triangularis,  Hair.  . . 703 

Ceriops  530 

Candolleana,  Arn.  ..  560 


IV 


INDEX  OF  GENERA  AND  SPECIFS. 


Page 


Chamcclaucium 

Thomasii , F.  v.  M.  ..  5715 
Cheilococca 

i ipooynij'olht , Salisb.  . . 363 

Chorizema..  ..  ..  338 

Baucri,  Benth.  . . ..  339 

Baxteri , Grab.  . . . . 337 

cllipticuin,  F.  v.  M.  ..  336 
Leiehlwrdtii , F.  v.  M...  341 
parvittoruni,  Benth.  ..  338 

Pultenete,  F.  v.  M.  . . 338 

sea  miens.  Sm.  . . . . 337 

trilohnm,  Sm.  ..  ..  337 

Citrullus  . . . . . . 696 

vulgaris,  Sch.  . . . . 697 

Clianthus 399 

Dampieri,  .1.  Ciinii.  ..  399 
Oxley  i,  A.  Cunn.  ..  399 
Clidanthera 

ptoraleoidet,  It.  Br.  . . 106 
Cl  i to  via  . . . . . . 420 

australis,  Benth.  ..  421 

ternatea,  Linn...  ..  421 

Coin  ten 

yalegifolia,  Sims  ..  401 
Coriandrum  . . . . 726 

sativum,  Linn.  . . ..  726 

Crantzia  . . . . . . 726 

australica,  F.  v.  M.  . . 726 
lineata,  Nutt.  . . . . 726 

Crotalaria  . . . . . . 371 

ajjinis,  DC.  . . . . 376 

alata,  Hum.  ..  ..  372 

< i nthylloides , I).  Don  . . 374 
calycina,  Schranel ; ...  373 

erassipes,  Hook.  . . 375 

crispata,  /•'.  r.  .1/.  ..  372 

Cunninghamii,  B.  Br...  375 
dissiti flora,  Benth.  ..  376 
feneslrata,  Hot.  Mag.  ..  373 
herbacea,  Schweigg  . . 376 
humifusa,  (Iruh.  ..  373 
incana,  Linn.  . . . . 376 

juncea,  Linn.  . . . . 373 

laburnifolia,  I.inn.  . . 377 
linifolia,  Linn.  f.  ..  373 
melunociirpn.  Wall.  ..  373 
Mitchelli,  Benth.  ..  374 
Mitchelli,  F.  v.  M.  . . 375 
Xovoe-Hollandiaj.  DC...  374 
oblonyi  folia , Hook.  ..  375 
quinquefolia,  I.inn.  . . 377 
retusa,  Linn.  . . . . 374 

Schimperi.  A.  Rich.  . . 376 
stenophylla,  Vog.  . . 373 

striata,  DC.  ...  ..  376 

trit'oliastrum,  II 'Hid.  ..  375 
verrucosa,  Linn.  ..  372 
Cueumis  . . . . . . 696 

jucundnn,  F.  v.  M.  ..  696 
Melo.  Linn.  . . . . 690  , 

Muelleri,  Naud.  ..  701  ; 
Paneherianus,  Nand.  ..  696 
picroearpus,  F.  v.  M.  ..  696  j 
pubescent,  Hook.  . . 696 
trigonus,  Ro.rb....  ..  696 

Cueurbita  ..  ..  ..  697 

micrantha,  F.  v.  M.  ..  701 


Page 

Pepo,  DC. 

697 

Cuttsia 

538 

viburnca,  F.  r.  M. 

534 

Cyiiometra . . ‘ . . 

169 

bijurja,  Span. 

469 

ramiflora,  Linn. 

469 

Dalbergia  .. 

1 43 

densa,  Benth.  . . 

443 

scandent,  Roxb. 

445 

Danvinia  . . 

575 

fascicularis,  Rudy. 

575 

Thomasii,  Benth. 

576 

Daucus 

727 

brachiatus,  Sieb. 

727  1 

pusillut,  Mich.  ... 

727 

Davidsonia 

537 

Jerseyana,  F.  v.  M. 

538 

pruriens,  F.  v.  M. 

538 

Daviesia  ... 

347 

acicularis,  Sm.  . . 

350 

arborea,  llill 

349 

concinna,  B.  Br. 

348 

corymbosa,  Sm. 

349 

denudata.  Vent. 

347 

egena,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

368 

ericoidet,  Pers.  . . 

352 

filipes,  Benth.  . . 

350 

genistifolia,  .1.  Cunn. 

35 1 

genistoides,  Lodd. 

350 

glauca,  Lodd.  . . 

349 

humifusa,  Sieb. 

337 

juncea,  Pers. 

347 

leptophylla,  A.  Cunn.  . . 

349 

linearis,  Lodd.  . . 

349 

macrophylla,  Endl. 

349 

mimotoides,  P,ot.  Mag.  . . 

349 

squarrosa,  Sm.  . . 

350 

nUeifolia , A ndr. 

350 

ulicina,  Sm. 

350 

nmbellata,  Sieb. 

337 

umbellulata  Sm. 

349 

Wyattiana,  Bail. 

348 

Decaspermum 

654 

paniculata,  Kurz 

654 

Delarbrea 

728 

Michieana,  F.  r.  M. 

729 

Dendrolobium- 

umbellatum.  W.  and  Arn. 

411 

Denis 

441 

koolgibbcrah,  Bail. 

4 45 

scandens,  Benth. 

445 

nliginosa,  Benth. 

445 

Desmodinm 

410 

acanthocladum,  /■'.  r M. 

412 

an strale,  DC. 

111 

biarticulatuni,  F.  v.  M. 

412 

braehypodum,  .1.  Cray 

41.3 

campy locanlon.  F.  r.  M. 

414 

dependens.  Blame 

413 

gangeticum,  I)C. 

412 

Muelleri,  Benth. 

41 -5 

nemorosum,  F.  r M.  . . 

41  1 

Noro-HoUandieum,  F.  v 

M 

423 

parvifolium,  DC. 

1 1.5 

polyearpum,  DC. 

414 

pulchellum.  Benth. 

411 

Page 


1 

renilornie,  DC.  . . ..  415 

rhytulophyllum,  B.  i.  M.  113 
trichocaulon,  DC.  . . 415 
trichostachyum,  Benth.  414 
triquetrum,  I)C.  . . 412 
umbellatum,  I)C.  ..  411 

varians,  Endl.  . . ..413 

Dicenna 

biarticulatuni,  DC.  ..  412 
pulchellum,  DC.  ..  Ill 
Didiscus 

albijlorus,  DC.  ..  ..718 

anisocarpns,  F.  v.  M.  ...  717 
glanditlostis,  F’.  v.  M.  . . 718 
glaucifolius,  F.  v.  M.  . . 717 
j /randis , F.  v.  M.  ..  717 
pilosus,  Benth.  ..  ..  717 

procumbent,  F.  v.  M.  ..  718 
Dillwynia  ..  ..  ..  360 

cineratcent,  DC.  . . 362 

clavatn,  Paxt.  ...  . . 362 

cuneuta,  Sieb.  ..  ..  360 

elegant,  Endl.  . . . . 362 

ericifolia,  Sm.  ..  ..  361 

erieifolia,  Sims  . . 362 

ericoidet,  Sieb.  . . . . 361 

Jili folia,  Endl.  . . . 361 

fioribunda,  Sm.  ..  361 

hitpidula,  Sieb.  ..  362 
juniperina,  Sieb.  . . 362 
microphylla . Sieb.  . . 361 
parvifolia,  11.  Br.  ..  301 
pednncularit,  Benth.  . . 361 
phi/licoidet,  A.  Cunn.  . . 361 
pinifoliu,  Sieb.  ..  ..  361 

rumntitsima , Benth.  ..  361 
teriphioidet,  Endl.  ..  361 
tpeeiom,  Paxt.  ..  ..  361 

tereti/olia,  Sieb.  . . 362 

tenerioidet,  Sieb.  . . 359 

Dinietopia 

anitoearpa,  Turcz  ..  717 
eyanopetnla , F.  v.  M.  ..  717 
grand  is,  Turcz  . . ..  717 

Ditem  ma 

brachystephann . F.  v.  M.  689 
c occinea,  DC.  . . . . 689 

Herbertiana,  DC.  ..  689 

Dolichos  . . . . . . 435 

axillaris,  E.  Mey.  . . 436 

hifiorus,  Linn.  ..  ...  436 

erenntifructns,  Stend.  ..  436 
yladiatus,  Jaeq.  . . 432 

Lablab,  I.inn.  . . ...  436 

lutenlus,  . Tacq.  ..  ..  435 

latent,  Swartz  . . , . 435 

obcordatus,  A.  Cunn.  . . 424 
purpureas,  Linn.  . . 436 
reticula  tut,  Ait.  ..  439 

rhynehotioides.  Miq.  N 437 
uuifl.orus,  Lam.  . . 436 

Donia 

formosa,  Don  . . . . 399 

speeiosa,  Don  . . . . 399 

Drosera  ..  ..  ..  546 

Adelse,  F.  v.  M.  . . 548 
auriculata,  Da  cl- It.  . . 550 
Banksii,  B.  Br.  . . 550 


INDEX  OF  GENERA  AND  SPECIES. 


v 


Page 

binata,  Labill.  . . 

. 549 

Bmmanni.  Vahl. 

. 548 

dichotoma,  Sm. 

. 550 

foliosa.  Hook.  f. 

. 550 

fulva , Planch.  . . 

. 549 

gracilis,  Hook.  f. 

. 550 

indica,  Linn. 

. 547 

Loureiri.  Hook. 

. 540 

Lovellas,  Bail.  . . 

. 548 

lunata.  Ham.  .. 

. 550 

pedata,  Pers. 

. 550 

peltata,  Sm. 

. 550 

petiolaris,  R.  Br. 

. 549 

petiolaris,  Sieb. 

. 550 

pygmaea,  DC. 

. 548 

serpens,  Planch. 

. 547 

spathulata,  Labill. 

. 549 

Dunbaria 

437 

conspersa,  Benth. 

437 

Ecballium 

697 

F.laterium,  A.  Rich 

697 

Entada 

470 

Pnrseetha,  DC.  . . 

470 

scandens,  Benth. 

470 

Epilobium  . . 

681 

Billardierianum.  Benth. 

682 

canescens,  Endl. 

682 

junceum,  Forst. 

681 

Friocalia 

major,  Sm. 

721 

minor,  Sm. 

721 

Eriosema 

441 

chinense,  Vog.  .. 

441 

Eriostemon 

trinerve,  Hook. 

591 

Ervum 

hirsutum,  Linn. 

420 

Eryngium  . . 

722 

angustifolmm,  DC. 

722 

expansum,  F.  v.  .17. 

723 

ovinum,  A.  Cunn. 

722 

pinnatifidum,  Bunge  . . 

722 

plantagineum,  F.  v.  .17. 

723 

rostratum,  Cav. 

722 

tetracephalum.  Bunge  . . 

722 

vesiculosum,  Labill.  . . 

723 

Erythrina  ... 

426 

indica,  Lam. 

427 

insularis,  Bail. 

427 

phlebocaipa.  Bail. 

427 

vespertilio,  Benth. 

427 

Erythrophlceum 

469  ; 

Laboueherii,  F.  v.  .17.  . . 

470 

Escallonia 

ciliata,  E.  and  M. 

582 

crenulata,  E.  and  M.  . . 

584 

Eucalyptus  

606 

acervula,  Hook.  f. 

628 

acervula,  Sieb.  . . 

613 

acmenioides,  Sclian.  .. 

614 

alba,  Reinw. 

627 

Albergiana,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

632 

aurantiaca,  F.  v.  M. 

624 

Baileyana,  F.  v.  .17. 

612 

Baueriana,  Miq. 

628 

bicolor,  A.  Cunn. 

618 

botryoides,  Sm.... 

624 

Bowmani,  F v.  .1/. 

Page 

619 

capitellata,  Sm. 

613 

citriodora.  Hook. 

634 

clavigera,  .4 . Cunn. 

630 

Cleeziana.  F.  r.  -V. 

620 

eorymbosa,  Sin. 

632 

crebra,  F.  v.  .1/. 

622 

dealbata.  A.  Cunn. 

625 

diehromophloia,  F.V.M. 

633 

drepanophvlla.  F.  v.  M. 

621 

eugenioides,  Sieb. 

613 

exserta,  F.  v.  M. 

626 

faleifolia.  Miq.  ..  616 

628 

fibrosa,  F.  v M. 

621 

fruticetoruin,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

615 

gracilis,  F.  v.  M. 

615 

grandifolia,  R.  Br. 

629 

Gunnii,  F.  v.  M. 

628 

hfemastonia.  Sin, 

616 

heeniastoma,  Miq. 

619 

hemilampra,  I'.  V.  M.  . . 

629 

hemiphloia,  /•'.  v.  M.  ... 

619 

Hookeri.  F.  v.  M. 

630 

Howittiana,  F.  r.  .1/.  .. 

620 

incrassata.  Labill. 

614 

largiflorens,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

619 

latifolia,  F.  r.  M. 

632 

leptophleba,  F.  r.  M. 

622 

leucoxylon,  F.  r.  J/. 

614 

lungirostris.  F.  v.  M.  . . 

626 

maculata,  Hook. 

634 

melanophloia,  F.  v.  .1/. 

621 

melissiodora,  F.  v.  M.  .. 

632 

melliodora,  A.  Cunn.  .. 

615 

micrantha,  DC. 

616 

microcorys,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

616 

micyotheca,  F.  v.  .1/.  . . 

623 

miniata,  A.  Cunn. 

623 

moluccana,  Eoxb. 

627 

ochrophloia.  F.  v.  M.  . . 

618 

pachyphylla.  F.  v.  M.  . . 

625 

pallidifolia.  F.  v.  M.  . . 

625 

paniculata.  Sin. 

616 

patentiflora,  Miq. 

615 

pellita,  F.  r.  .1/. 

629 

peltata,  Benth. 

6.32 

pendula,  A.  Cunn. 

619 

persicifolia,  DC.  621, 

614 

persicifolia , Miq. 

628 

phoenieea.  F.  v.  M. 

631 

pilularis,  Sin.  ... 

614 

piperita,  Sm. 

613 

Planchoniana,  F.  v.  M. 

612 

platyphylla,  F.  v.  M.  ... 

627 

platypodos,  Cav. 

624 

polyanthemos,  Schau.  .. 

617 

polysciadia,  F.  v.  M.  .. 

630 

populifolia,  Hook. 

618 

pruinosa,  Schau, 

617 

Eaveretiana,  F.  v.  M.  . . 

623 

resinifera,  Sm.  . . 

628 

robusta,  Sm. 

624 

rostrata,  Sclilecht. 

625 

saligna,  Sm. 

628 

semicorticata , F.  v.  M. 

614 

setosa,  Schau.  .. 

631 

siderophloia,  Benth.  . . 

620 

sideroxulon,  A.  Cunn.  ,,, 

615 

Page 

signata,  F.  v.  M.  . . 616 
spectabilis , F.  v.  M.  . . 620 
epodophylla,  F.  v.  M.  ..  617 
Staigeriana,  F.  r.  M.  . . 622 
Stuartiana,  F.  r.  M.  . . 628 
subulata,  A.  Cunn.  . . 620 
tereticornis,  Sm.  . . 626 
terniinalis,  F.  r.  .1/.  . . 636 

terminally,  Sieb.  . . 616 
tesselaris,  F.  r.  M.  ...  630 
tetrodonta,  F.  v.  M.  . . 634 
Torelliana,  F.  v.  M.  ..  631 
traehyphloia,  F.  v.  M.  633 
trianthos,  F.  v.  M.  . . 614 
variegata,  F.  r.  M.  . . 634 
viminalis,  Hook.  . . 630 
Watsoniana,  F.  v.  .17.  . . 634 

Euchilus 

cuspidatus,  F.  v.  M.  . . 358 

Eugenia  ...  ..  ..  655 

angophoroides,  F.  v.  M.  664 
apodophylla,  F.  r.  M.  . . 664 
a tint  ral is.  Wendl.  . . 663 
Bungadinnia,  Bail.  . . 662 
carissoides,  F.  r.  M.  . . 656 
conn i flora,  F.  r.  .V.  . . 650 

coryantha,  F,  r.  M.  . . 650 
cryptoplilebia.  F.  r.  .1/.  655 

cymosa,  Boxb.  ..  ..  661 

Dallachiana,  F.  v.  M.  . . 665 
elliptic.a,  Sm.  . . . . 657 

euealyptoides,  F.  v.  .1/.  662 

fibrosa.  Bail.  ..  ...  662 

firma.  Wall.  ..  ..  661 

Fitzgeraldi,  F.  v.  M.  and 
Bail.  . . . . . . 660 

forth,  F.  v.  M.  . . . . 661 

grandis,  Wight  . . . . 660 

gustavioides,  Bail.  . . 658 
hedraiophylla,  F.  r.  .1/.  665 

hemilampra  F.  v.  .17.  . . 657 
Hislopii,  Bail.  ..  ..  660 

Hodgkinsoniw,  F.  r.  .V.  660 
hgpospodia,  F.  v.  M.  ..  657 
.Tambolana,  Lam.  . . 659 
Johnsoni,  F.  v.  M.  . . 661 
kuranda,  Bail.  . . ..  658 

leptantha,  Wight  . . 658 

Luehmanni,  F.  r.  .1/.  ..  664 
macoorai,  Bail.  . . 663 

Moorei,  F.  v.  M.  ..  650 
myrtifolia,  Sims  ..  663 
odoratissima,  Bail.  . . 660 
oleosa,  F.  v.  ,17.  . . 664 

paniculata,  B.  and  S.  . . 663 
punctnlata.  Bail.  . . 663 
rariflora,  Bentti.  . . 657 
Smithii,  Foir  . . . . 657 

sordida,  Bail.  . . . . 663 

suborbicularis,  Bentli.  . . 661 
Tierneyana,  F.  v.  .17.  . . 660 
uniflora,  Linn. . . ..  657 

Ventenatii,  Bentli.  . . 658 
Wilsonii,  F.  v.  .17.  . . 661 

Fabricia 

myrtifolia.  lies rtn.  , . 588 


Part  II.  EE 


VI 


INDEX  OF  GENERA  AND  SPECIES. 


Fenzlia 

Page  1 
653  | 

obtusa,  Endl.  . . 

653  I 

retusa,  Endl.  . . 

654  1 

Fischera 

linearis,  Sm. 

719 

Flemingia 

442 

capitata,  Zoll.  . . 

443 

involucrata,  Benth. 

443 

lineata,  Roxb.  . . 

442 

parviflora,  Benth. 

442 

pauciflora,  Benth. 

442 

Fragaria 

indioa,  Andr.  .. 

528 

Qalactia 

429 

Muelleri,  Benth. 

. 430 

tenuiflora,  Willd. 

430 

varians,  Bail.  . . 

. 430 

Galega 

. 390 

officinalis,  Linn. 

. 390 

Gastrolobium 

. 353 

grandiflorum,  F.  v.  31 

353 

Huegelii,  Henfr. 

. 358 

Gets  sons 

Benthami,  F.  v.  M. 

541 

rubi folia,  F.  v.  M. 

. 542 

Gillbeea 

. 538 

adenopetala,  F.  v.  31.  . 

. 539 

Glinus 

lotoides,  Linn.  . . 

. 711 

Mollugo,  Fenzl  . . 

. 712 

orygioides,  F v.  M. 

. 712 

Glycine 

. 421 

bimaculata,  Curt. 

. 424 

clandestina,  T Vendl. 

. 422 

coccinea,  Curt.  . . 

. 426 

falcata,  Benth.  . . 

. 422 

minima,  Willd.  . . 

. 422 

retusa,  Sol. 

. 424 

rubicunda.  Curt. 

. 425 

sericea,  Benth.  . . 

. 423 

tabacina,  Benth. 

. 422 

tomentosa,  Benth. 

. 423 

Glycyrrhiza 

. 405 

psoralioides,  Benth.  . 

. 406 

Gompholobium  . . 

. 341 

barbigerum,  DC. 

. 342 

eUipticum,  Labill. 

. 336 

Jimbriatum,  Sm. 

. 342 

foliolosum,  Benth. 

. 343 

latifolium,  Sm.  . . 

. 341 

nitidum,  Soland. 

. 342 

pinnatum,  Sm.  . . 

. 342 

psoraleeefolium,  Salisb. 

342 

stenophyllum,  F.  v.  M. 

343 

subulatum,  Benth. 

. 343 

virgatum,  Sieb. 

. 342 

Goniocarpus 

micranthus,  Thunb. 

. 555 

microcarpus,  Thieb. 

. 555 

serpyllifolius,  Hook.  f. 

557 

tenellus,  DC. 

..  556 

tetragynus,  Nees 

. 556 

teucrioides,  DC. 

. 556 

vernicosus,  Hook.  f. 

. 557 

Goodia 

. 370 

lotifolia,  Salisb. 

. 370 

medicaginea,  F.  v.  M.  . 

. 371 

Guilandina 

Page  j 
450  j 

Bondncellu.  Linn. 

450 

Gunnea 

707 

septifraga,  F.  v.  31. 

707 

Gyrocarpus 

570 

ucuminatus,  Meissn. 

. 571 

americanus,  Jacq. 

. 571 

asiaticus,  Willd. 

571 

Jacquini,  Roxb. 

. 571 

mgosus,  11.  Br. ... 

. 571 

sphenopterus,  R.  Br. 

. 571 

Haloragis  . . 

. 552 

acanthocarpa,  Brongn. 

555 

alata.  Jacq. 

. 554 

aspera,  Lindl.  . . 

. 554 

Bauerlenii,  F.  v.  31.  . 

. 554 

ceratophylla,  Endl. 

. 554 

depressa,  K 'alp. 

. 556 

elata.  A . Cunn. 

. 554 

data,  Hook.  f.  . . 

. 556 

gonocarpus,  Spreng. 

. 556 

Gossei,  F.  v.  31. 

. 553 

Gunnii,  Hook.  f. 

. 556 

heterophylla,  Brongn. 

555  i 

leptotheca,  F.  v.  M. 

. 556 

micrantha,  R.  Br. 

. 555 

pinnatijida,  Hook.  f.  . 

. 554 

stricta,  R.  Br.  . . 

. 555 

tenella,  Brongn. 

. 555  ! 

tetragyna,  Hook.  f. 

. 556  i 

teucrioides,  A.  Gray  .. 

. 556  j 

Hardenbergia 

. 423 

cordata,  Benth. 

. 424 

monophylla.  Benth.  . 

. 424 

ovata,  Benth.  ... 

. 424 

retusa,  Benth.  . . 

. 424 

Hedera 

. 736 

australiana,  F.  v.  31.  . 

. 736 

Hedysarum 

reniforme,  Linn. 

. 415 

rugosum,  Willd. 

. 418 

tuber culosum,  Labill.  . 

. 415 

varians,  Labill. 

. 413 

Helosciadium 

amtrale,  Bunge 

. 724 

leptophyllum,  DC. 

. 724 

prostratum,  Bunge 

. 724 

Heptapleurum 

. 735 

venulosum,  Seem. 

. 735 

Iiomalium 

. 685 

alnifolium,  F.  v.  M. 

. 686 

brachybotrys,  F.  v.  31. 

686 

circumpinnatum,  Bail. 

686 

vitiense,  Benth. 

. 685 

Homalocalyx 

. 580 

ericEeus,  F.  v.  31. 

. 580 

polyandrus,  F.  v.  31.  . 

. 580 

Homoranthus 

. 576 

flavescens,  A.  Cunn. 

. 576 

virgatus,  A.  Cunn. 

. 576 

Hovea 

. 368 

acutifolia,  A.  Cunn. 

. 369 

apiculata,  A.  Cunn.  . 

. 369 

Beckeri,  F.  v.  M. 

. 369 

heterophylla,  A.  Cunn. 

368 

lanceolata, 'Sims 

. 369 

lanigera,  Lodd.  , 

. 370 

leiocarpa,  Benth. 

Page 
. 370 

linearis,  R.  Br. 

. 368 

longifolia,  R.  Br. 

. 369 

longipes.  Benth. 

. 370 

■mucronata,  A.  Cunn.  . 

. 369 

pannosa,  A.  Cunn. 

. 370 

purpurea,  Lodd. 

. 369 

nwemulosa,  Benth. 

. 369 

ramulosa,  A.  Cunn.. 

. 370 

villosa,  Lindl.  .. 

. 370 

Hydrocotyle 

. 715 

asiatica,  Linn.  ... 

. 716 

Bonplandi,  A.  Rich 

. 715 

cordi folia,  Hook. 

. 716 

densi flora,  DC.  . . 

. 716 

elegans,  A.  Rich 

. 715 

Gaudichaudiana,  DC.  . 

..  715 

hirta,  R.  Br.  ... 

. 715 

interrupt a,  Mueh. 

. 715 

intertexta,  R.  Br. 

. 715 

laxifiora,  1)C.  . . 

. 715 

il Iannii,  Hook.  . . 

. 715 

marchantioides.  Clos.  . 

. 715 

mosclutta,  Forst. 

. 715 

pedicellosa,  F.  r.  31.  . 

. 716 

pulchella,  R.  Br. 

. 715 

repanda,  Pers.  .. 

. 716 

rot undi folia,  Roxb. 

. 715 

sibthorpioides,  Lam. 

. 715 

tasmanica,  Hook. 

. 715 

tripartita,  R.  Br. 

. 716 

vagans,  Hook.  . . 

. 715 

v erticillata,  Thunb. 

. 715 

vulgaris,  I Ann. 

, . 715 

Imbricaria 

ciliata,  Sm. 

. 582 

crenulata,  Sm  . . 

. 584 

Indigofera  . . 

. 384 

acanthocarpa.  Lindl.  . 

. . 406 

angulata,  Lindl. 

, . 389 

argentea,  Linn. 

. . 387 

australis,  Willd. 

. . 389 

Baileyi,  F.  v.  31. 

. . 388 

brevidens,  Benth. 

..  389 

decora , Lindl.  .. 

. . 389 

dejiexa,  Hochst. 

. . 387 

enneaphylla,  Linn. 

. . 385 

ervoides,  Meissn. 

. . 389 

glandulosa,  Willd. 

. . 386 

haplophylla,  F.  r.  31.  , 

. . 386 

hirsuta , Linn.  .. 

. . 387 

lasiantha,  F.  v.  M. 

. . 389 

linifolia,  Retz.  . . 

. . 385 

oxycarpa,  F.  v.  M. 

. . 387 

parviflora,  Hcyne 

...  387 

pratensis,  F.  v.  31. 

. . 388 

saxicolia,  F.  v.  31. 

. . 388 

sylvatica,  Sieb. 

. . 389 

tinctoria,  Linn. 

. . 388 

trifoliata,  Linn. 

. . 386 

trita,  Linn.  f.  ... 

. . 386 

viscosa , Lam.  .. 

. . 387 

Inga 

monilifera,  DC. 

. . o 20 

Irvingia 

australiana,  F.  v.  M. 

..  736 

INDEX  OF  GENERA  AND  SPECIES. 


Isotropis  ... 

Page 
..  340 

filicaulis,  Benth. 

. 340 

parviflora,  Benth. 

. 341 

Jackson  ia  .. 

. 343 

dilatata,  Benth. 

. 344 

macrocarpa,  Benth. 
odontoclada,  F.  v.  M.  . 

. 346 

. 344 

purpurascens,  F.  v.  M. 

346 

ramosissima,  Benth.  . 

. 344 

rhadinoclona,  F.  v.  M. 

345 

scoparia,  R.  Br. 

. 345 

Stackhousii,  F.  v.  M.  . 

. 346 

thesioides,  A.  Cunn.  . 

. 345 

vernicosa,  F.  v.  M. 

. 345 

viminalis,  A.  Cunn. 

. 340 

Jambosa 

australis,  W.  and  L.  . 

663 

eucalyptoides,  F.  v.  M. 

663 

firma,  Bl. 

661 

grandis,  Bl. 

661 

Thozetiana,  F.  v.  M.  . 

663 

Jussisea 

682 

angustifolia,  Lam. 

683 

repens,  Linn.  ... 

682 

diffusa,  Forst.  ... 

682 

suffruticosa,  Linn. 

683 

Swartziana , DC. 

682 

villosa,  Lam. 

683 

Kaleniczenkia 

daviesioidcs,  Turcz 

334 

Kamptzia 

albens,  Nees 

639 

Kennedya  ... 

425  i 

cordata,  Lindl. 

424 

exaltata,  Bail.  .. 

426 

longiracemosa,  Lodd.  .. 

424  ' 

monophyllu,  Vent. 

424  i 

ovata,  Sims 

424  1 

phascolifolia,  Hoffm.  .. 

425  i 

procurrens,  Benth. 

425  1 

prostrata,  R.  Br. 

426 

rubicunda,  Vent. 

425 

tabacina,  Labill. 

423 

Kissodendron 

australianum,  Seem.  . . 

736  j 

Kunzea  . . 

592 

brachyandra , F.  v.  M. 

592 

calida,  F.  v.  M. 

592  i 

leptospermoides,  F.  v.  M. 

593 

peduncularis,  F.  v.  M. 

593 

Labichea  . . 

464  j 

Buettneriana,  F.  v.  M. 

465  ! 

digitata,  Benth. 

465  j 

nitida,  Benth.  . . 

465 

rupestris,  Benth. 

465  ; 

Lablab 

uncinatus,  R.  Br. 

436 

vulgaris,  Savi  . . 

436 

Lachnopodium 

bracteatum,  Blume 

669 

Lagenaria  . . 

693 

vulgaris,  Ser. 

693 

Lagerstrcemia 

677 

Archeriana,  Bail. 

678 

elegans,  Wall.  .. 

678 

Flos-Reginse,  Retz. 
indica,  Linn.  . . 
Lamprolobium 
fruticosum,  Be  nth. 
Leptocyamus 

clandestinus,  Benth. 
latifolius,  Benth. 
sericens , F.  v.  M. 
Leptolobinm 

clandestinum,  Benth. 
elongatum,  Benth. 
microphyllum , Benth. 
tabacinum , Benth. 
tomentosum,  Benth. 
Leptosema 

oxylobioides,  F.  v.  M. 
Leptospermum 
abnorme,  F.  v.  M. 
aciculare,  Schau. 
amboinense,  DC. 
arachnoides,  Gaartn. 
arachnoideum,  Sni. 
attenuatum,  Sm. 
australe,  Salisb. 
baccatum,  Schau. 
baccatum,  Sm.  . . 
brevipes , F.  v.  M. 
divaricatum,  Schau. 
emarginatum , Wendl. 
Fabricia,  Benth. 
flavescens,  Sm. 
floribundum,  Salisb. 
gnidicefolium,  DC. 
gniditefolium,  Hort. 
grandiflorum,  Lodd. 
juniperi folium,  Cav. 
juniperinum,  Sm. 
lanigerum,  Sm... 
Luehmanni,  Bail, 
micromyrtus , Miq. 
multicaule,  A.  Cunn. 
multiflorum,  Cav. 
myrtifolium,  Sieb. 
nobile,  F.  v.  M. . . 
oxycedrus,  Schau. 
pendulum,  Sieb. 
persiciflorum,  Beichb. 
polygalifolium,  Salisb. 
porophyllam,  Cav. 
recurvifolium , Salisb. 
scoparium,  Forst. 
sericatum,  Lindl. 
stellatum,  Cav. . . 
styphelioides,  Schau. 
Then,  Willd.  . . 
triloculare,  Vent. 
trinerve,  Sm. 
tuberculatum,  Poir. 
umbellatum,  Goartn. 
virgatum,  Schau. 
wooroonooran,  Bail.  . 

Lespedeza... 
cuneata,  Don 
juricea,  DC. 

Liparia 

badocana,  Blanco 

Lonchocarpus 
Blackii,  Benth.  . . 


Page 
..  678 
..  678 
..  390 
..  390 

. . 422 
. . 423 
..  423 

...  422 
..  423 
. . 422 
..  423 
..  423 

..  335 
..  587 
..  591 
. . 590 
. . 589 
. . 590 
. . 590 
. . 591 
..  590 
..  590 
. 590 
, . 591 
..  590 
, . 589 
. 588 
. 589 
,.  590 
. 591 
. 591 
. 589 
. 590 
. 590 
. 590 
. 592 
. 589 
. 591 
. 590 
. 591 
. 589 
. 590 
. 591 
. 590 
. 589  j 
. 589  I 
. 590 
. 589 
. 591 
. 591  ! 
. 590 
. 589  i 
. 590  1 
. 590 
. 589 
. 626 
. 589 
. 588 


381  | 
444  j 
444  I 


Lophostemon 
arborescens,  Schott 
Lotus 

albidus,  Lodd.  .. 
australis,  Andr. . . 
lavigatus,  Benth. 
Ludwigia  .. 
diffusa,  Ham. 
parviflora,  Roxb. 
perennis,  Linn... 
prostrata,  Roxb. 

Luffa 

acutangula,  Roxb. 
segyptiaca,  Mill 
cylindrica,  Rcem. 
leiocarpa,  F.  v.  M. 
pentandra,  Roxb. 
Lumnitzera 

coccinea,  IF.  and  Am.. . 
montana,  F.  v.  M. 
racemosa,  Willd. 
Lupinus  .... 
Lysicarpus.. 

ternil'olius,  F.  v.  M. 
Lythrum  . . 
hyssopifolium,  DC. 
salicaria,  Linn. 
thymifolium,  Linn. 

Macarthuria 
neocambrica,  F.  v.  M... 
Maclellandia 

Griffithiana,  Wight 
Mackinlaya 

macrosciadia,  F.  v.  M. 
Macklottia 
amboinensis,  Korth. 
Macropteranthes 
Fitzalani,  F.  v.  M. 
Leichhardtii,  F.  v.  M. . . 
montana,  F.  v.  M. 
Mangium 

montanum,  Rumph. 
Marlea 

vitiensis,  Benth. 
Medieago 

denticulata,  Willd, 
sativa,  Linn, 

Medinilla  .. 

Balls-Headleyi,  F.  v.  M. 
Meladinia 
densiflora,  Turcz. 
Melaleuca 
acacioides,  F.  v.  M. 
angustifolia,  Geertn. 
armillaris,  Sm. 
bractcata,  F.  v.  M. 
coronata,  Andr. . . 
curvifolia,  Schlecht.  .. 
diosmifolia,  Dum.  Cours. 
discolor,  Reich. 
Drummondii,  Schau.  . . 
ericifolia,  Andr. 
ericit'olia,  Sm.  . . 
entbescens,  Otto . . 
foliolosa,  A.  Cunn. 
genistifolia,  Sm. 
gnidiccfolia,  Vent. 


vii 


Page 

. 636 
, 380 
. 380 
. 380 
380 
683 
683 
683 

683 

684 

693 

694 
694 
694 
694 
694 
569 

569 

570 
569 

377 

639 

640 

675 

676 

675 

676 

710 

710 

677 
730 
730 

589 

569 

570 
570 
570 

378 
737 
737 

378 

378 

670 

670 

381 

596 

599 

599 

602 

601 

598 

602 

603 

598 

603 

602 

603 

603 

604 
601 
598 


INDEX  OP  GENERA  AND  SPECIE^. 


viii 


Gunniana,  Schau. 
hakeoides,  F.  v.  M. 
hamata,  Field  A'  Gardn. 
hcliophila , F.  v.  M. 
hypericilolia,  Sm. 
jiiniperina,  Sieb. 
juniperoide* , DC. 
lanceolata,  Otto 
lasiandra,  F.  v.  M. 
laurina,  Sm. 
leucadendron,  Linn.  . . 
linariifolia,  Sm. 
minor,  Sm. 

minutifolia,  F.  v.  M.  . . 
nodosa,  Sm. 
tiodosn,  Sieb. 


Page 

G03 

603 

608 

603 

598 
603 
603 
601  | 
601 
637 
600 

599 

600 
GOl 
603 
603 


paludosa,  11.  Bv.  ...  594 

Preissiana,  Schau.  ..  602 

pubescent,  Schau.  . . 602 

sa/igna,  Bl.  ..  ..  600 

semite res,  Schau.  . . 603 


stvphelioides,  Sm. 
sttaveoleits,  Gfertn. 
sytnphocarpa,  F.  v.  M . . 
tumariscina.  Hook. 

1'hea,  Wendl  .. 
thymifolia,  .S’jh..  . 
trinervia.  White 
uncinata,  R.  Br. 
viridi flora,  Gsertn. 
Melastoma 

denticulatum,  Labill.  .. 
nialabathricum,  Linn-.. 
Novec-Hollandia,  Naud. 
polyanthum,  Blume 
• rubro-limbatnm,  Link  & 
Otto  . . 

Melilotus  . . 
alba.  Lam. 
parviflora,  Desf. 
Melothria  . . 
celebica.  Cogn.  . . 
Cunninghaiuii,  F.  v.  M. 
maderaspatana,  Cogn.  . . 
Muelleri,  Benth. 
Memecylon 

ra  mid  or  it  m,  Lam. 
tinctorium,  Keen, 
umbellatum,  Burin. 
Mesembryanthemum 
;equilaterale.  Hair. 
australe,  Sol.  . . 
clavellatum,  Haw. 
demissum,  Willd. 
ytaucescem.  Haw. 
nigrescent,  Haw. 
fine  cox.  F.  v.  M. 

Rossi i.  Haw. 
Metrosideros 
nlbida,  Sieb. 
apocynifolia,  Salisb. 
armillaris,  Gfertn. 
cahjcina,  Cav.  .. 
clirysantha,  F.  v.  M.  . . 
citrina,  Curt. 
coriacen,  Salisb. 
costata,  Gsertn. . . 
decora,  Salisb.  .. 


602 

(536 

598 

604 

589 
598 

590 
602 
600 

669 

670 
670 
670 
670 


669 

378 

379 
379  | 
790 
700 

700  : 
699  I 

701  I 
671  I 
671 
671  ; 
671 
705 

705 
70(5 

706 
706 
705 
705 
705 
705 

640 
600 
605 
602 
598 

641 
494 
600 
605 
601 


floribunda,  Sm. . . 
floribunda,  Vent. 
gltiucu,  Bonpl.  .. 
glonndifera.  Sin. 
gracilis,  Salisb. . . 
gummifera,  Gfertn. 
hype ricifoli a,  Salisb. 
hyssopifolia,  Cav. 
jiiniperina,  Beichb. 
lanceolata,  Pers. 
lanceolata,  Sm. 
lophantha,  Vent. 
marginata,  Cav. 
nodosa,  Gfertn... 
pallida,  Bonpl.  . . 
procera,  Salisb... 
propinqua,  Salisb. 
pungent,  Beichb. 
rugiilosa.  Sieb.  . . 
salicifnlia.  Gfertn. 
snligna,  Sm. 
semper 'Horens,  1 ,odd. 
spec  iota,  Sims  . . 
tetrapetala.  F.  r.  M. 

Mezoneurum 

brachycarpum,  Benth. 
Scortechinii,  F.  v.  M. 

Micromyrtus 
leptocalyx,  Benth. 
microphylla,  Benth. 

Millettia 
Blackii.  F.  v.  M. 
Maideniana,  Bail. 
megasperma.  F.  v.  M . 
pilipes,  Bail. 

Mimosa 

angustifolia,  Jacq. 
binervis,  Wendl. 
botrycephala,  Vent. 
decnrrens,  Wendl. 
discolor.  Audr.  . . 
granditiora,  Soland. 
jiiniperina,  Vent. 
linearis.  Wendl. 
longifolia,  Andr. 
myrtifolia,  Sm. . . 
obliqua,  Lam.  . . 
paniculata,  Wendl. 
procera,  Roxb.  ... 
pudica,  Linn.  . . 
scandens,  Linn. . . 
Sophorie,  Labill. 
nlicifolia,  Salisb. 
ulicina,  Wendl. . . 

Mirbelia 

angustifolia,  Grab, 
aotoides,  F.  v.  M. 
Baxteri,  Lindl. . . 
oxyclada,  F.  v.  M. 
pungens,  A.  Citnn. 
reticulata.  Sin.  .. 
ntbiafolia,  G.  Don 
speciosa,  Sieb.  . . 

Modecea 
australis,  R.  Br. 
populifolia,  Bail. 

Mollugo 

Cerviana,  Ser.  . . 


Page 

605 
658 
594 
639 
598 
629 
598 
600 
603  | 
605  I 
594 
594 
594 
603 
596 
639 
639 
603 
594 
622 


o.i- » 

594  I 

640 

451 

451 

451 

582 

582 

582  | 

396 

444 

396 

396 

397  ! 

473 


509 

514 

515 
514 
521 
482 
491 
504 
493 
490 
514 
519 
473 
470 
504 
482 
482 

338 

339  , 

339  1 
337 

340 
3.39 
339 

339 

340 
689 

689 

690 

711 

712 


Page 


glinoides,  A.  Rich.  . . 712 
Glinus,  A.  Rich.  ..  711 
Linkii,  Ser.  . . . . 712 

Nova- Hollandia,F . v . M.  712 
orygioides,  F.  r.  M.  ..  711 
parviflora , DC.  . . . . 712 

pentaphylla,  Linn.  ..  712 
Spergula,  Linn.  ..  712 
strieta,  Linn.  ..  ..712 

triphylla,  Lour.  ...  712 
nmbellata,  Ser.  ..  ..  712 

verticillata,  Roxb.  . . 712 
Momordica  . . . . 695 

balsamina , Linn.  ..  695 

Charantia,  Linn.  . . 695 

Monoxora 

rubesce ns,  Benth.  ..  652 

Motherwellia  ..  ..  732 

haplosciadea,  F.  v.  M. . . 732 
Mucuna  . . . . . . 429 

gigantea.  DC.  . . . . 429 

Mukia  . . . . . . 699 

eelebica,  R.  Cogn.  . . 700 
micrantha,  F.  v.  M.  . . 701 
scabrella,  Am.  ..  ..  699 

Myriophyllum  . . . . 557 

gracile,  Benth.  ..  . . 558 

latifolium,  F.  v.  M.  ..  558 
varitefolium.  Hook.  f.  . . obi 
verrucosum,  Lindl.  . . bbl 
Myrtus  . . . . . . 647 

acmenioides,  F.  v.  M.  . . 650 
Becklerii,  F.  v.  it/.  . . 649 
Bidwillii,  Benth.  ..  649 
cymiflora,  F.  v.  M.  ..  646 
elachantha,  F.  v.  M.  ..  654 
exaltata,  Bail.  . . . . 651 

fragrantissima,  F.  v.  M.  650 
gonoclada,  F.  r.  M.  ...  648 
Hillii,  Benth.  ...  ..  649 

lasioclada,  F.  v.  M.  ...  648 
melastomoides,  F.  v.  M.  652 
metrosideros.  Bail.  . . 651 
monosperma,  F.  v.  M.  . . 651 

nitida,  Gmel.  . . . . 651 

racemulosa,  Benth.  . . 649 
rhytisperma,  F.  v.  M.  . . 648 
Shepherdi,  F.  v.  M.  . . 650 
Smithii,  Spreng.  . . 657 
tenuifolia,  Sm.  . . . . 648 

Tozerii,  F.  v.  M.  . . 646 
trinervia,  DC.  . . . . 652 

trine  lira,  F.  v.  M.  ...  646 

Nelitris 

paniculata,  Benth.  . . 654 
Nematophylluni 

Hookeri,  F.  v.  M.  . . 367 
Neptunia  . . . . . . 472 

gracilis,  Benth...  ..  472 
monosperma,  F.  v.  M. . . 472 
Nessea  ..  ..  ...  676 

Robertsii,  F.  v.  M.  ...  676 
Nothopanax 

elegant,  Seem.  . . ...  735 

Macgillivrayi,  Seem.  . . 734 
Murrayi,  Seem.  . . 733 
sambucifoliiim,  Seem.  ..  734 


INDEX  OF  GENERA  AND  SPECIES. 


IX 


Page 


X CIqC 

(Euan the  ..  ..  ...  725 

javanica,  DC.  ..  ..  726 

stolonifera,  Wall.  . . 726 

(Enothera  ..  ..  ...  680 

biennis,  I Ann.  ..  ..  680 

elata,  H.  B.  K. . . . . 681 

Ion  gift  or  a,  Jaeq.  ..  681 

salicifolia,  Desf.  ...  681 
Opuntia  . . . . . . 704 

four,  Haw.  ..  ...  704 

vulgaris,  Mill  ..  ..  704 

Ormocarpum  ...  ..  406 

oblongum,  Desv.  ..  411 
sennoides,  DC.  . . . . 406 

Osbeckia  . . . . . . 668 

angustifolia,  Don  . . 660 

chinensis,  I.inv.  ..  668 
Osbornea  ..  ..  ...  644 

octodonta,  F.  r.  31.  ...  645 

Otanthera  . . . . . . 669 

bracteata,  Forth . ..  660 

Oxycludium 

semiseptatu m,  E.  v.  M. . . 840 
Oxylobium..  ..  ...  385 

aciculiferuni,  Benth.  ..  337 
argenteum,  Kunze  . . 336 
ellipticum,  R.  Br.  . . 336 
Pultenece,  Lodd.  . . 336 
scandens,  Benth.  ...  336 
spinosUm,  DC.  ...  ..  358 

staurophyllum,  Benth...  337 
trilobatum,  Benth.  ..  337 

Panax  733 

angustifolivs,  F.  v.  M....  734 
cephalobotrys,  F.  v.  M.  734 
dendroides,  F.  v.  M.  . . 734 
elegans,  F.  v.  31.  . . 734 

Maedowalli,  F.  v.  M.  ..  729 
Maegillivreei,  Benth.  ..  734 
macrosciadia,  F.  v.  M. . . 730 
mollis,  Benth.  ...  ..  733 

Murrayi,  F.  r.  31.  ..  733 

sambucifolius,  Sieb.  . . 734 
Paratropia 

venulosa,  W.  and  Am. . . 735 

Parinarium  . . . . 524 

Griffithianum,  Benth.  ...  524 
Nonda,  F.  v.  31.  ...  524 

Parkinsonia  . . . . 453 

aculeata,  Linn. . . ..  453 

Passiflora  ..  ..  ...  687 

alba,  L.  and  U. . . . . 688 

aurantia,  Font.  . . 689 
Banksii,  Benth.  ..  689 
brachystephana,  F.  v.  M.  689 
coccinea,  Soland.  . . 689 

edulis,  Sinus  . . . . 68H 

feetida,  Linn.  . . . . 688 

Herbertiana,  Lindt.  . . 688 
quadrangularis,  Linn...  688 
suberosa,  Linn...  ..  688 

Peltophorum  . . . . 452 

ferrugineum,  Benth.  ..  453 
Pemphis  . . . . . . 677 

acidula,  Font.  ..  ...  677 

Pentapanax  ..  ...  729 

Willmottii,  /■’.  v.  M.  . . 730 


Page 


Peplis  ..  ..  ...  675 

portula,  Linn.  ..  ..  675 

Persian 

vulgaris.  Mill  ..  ..  525 

Petalostyles  . . . . 464 

labichoides,  R.  Br.  . . 464 

Petroselinuiu 

prostratum , DC.  . . 724 

Pharnaceum 

Cerviana,  Linn.  ..  712 

Mollugo,  Linn.  . . . . 712 

jMrviflomm,  Roth  ..  712 

pentaphyllum,  Spreng. . . 712 
strictum,  Spreng.  712 

triphyllum,  Spreng.  . . 712 
Phaseoius  ...  . . . . 432 

Mungo,  Linn.  . . . . 433 

psorateoides , IV.  and  A.  433 
radiatus,  lioxb. . . . . 433 

rostratus.  Wall. . . . . 433 

Ro.rburghii , W.  and  Arn.  433 
semiereetus .Linn.  ..  433 
trinervius,  Heyne  . . 433 
truxillensis,  H.  B.  K.  . . 432 
vexillatus,  Linn.  . 434 

vulgaris,  Linn.  . . ..  432 

Phellandrium 

stoloniferum,  Roxb.  ...  726 
Phyllodium 

pule  helium , Desv.  ..  411 

Phyllota  ...  . . . . 352 

uspera,  Benth.  ..  ..  353 

Baueri,  Benth.  ..  ...  353 

Billardieri,  Benth.  . . 353 
romosa,  Benth.  . . . . 353 

grandiflora,  Benth.  ..  353 
phylicoides,  Bcntli.  . . 352 
pilosa,  Benth.  . . ...  353 

squarrosa,  Benth.  ..  353 

Pithecolobimn  . . . . 519 

granditiorum,  Benth.  . . 520 
Hendersonii,  F.  v.  M.  . . 521 
Junghuhnianum,  Benth.  520 
Lovellee,  Bail.  ..  ..  521 

moniliferum,  Benth.  ...  520 
pruinosum,  Benth.  ..  520 
ramiflorum,  F.  v.  M.  . . 521 
Vaillantii,  F.  v.  M.  . . 522 
Platycarpidium 
validum,  F.  v.  M.  . . 719 
Platylobium  . . . . 362 

formosum.  Sin.  . . . . 362 

lanceolatum,  An  dr.  ..  366 

ovatum,  Andr.  . . . . 366 

Platysace 

valida,  I’,  v.  M.  ..719 
Pleurandra 

reticulata.  Hook.  ..  336 
Podolobium 

aciculiferuni,  F.  v.  M.  ...  337 
humifusum,  Don  ..  337 
scandens,  DC.  . . 337 

staurophyllum,  DC.  ..  337 
trilobatum,  11.  Br.  . . 337 
Podopetalum  . . . . 447 

Ormondi,  F.  r.  HI.  . 447 
Poiretia 

i linearis,  Sm.  ..  ..  368 


Page 


Polyosma  . . . . . . 534 

alangiacea,  F.  v.  31.  . . 535 

Cuuninghamii,  Benn.  . . 534 
reducta,  F.  v.  31.  . . 535 

rigidiuscula,  F.  v.  31.  . . 535 

Pongamia  . . . . . . 446 

glabra,  Vent.  . . . . 446 

Prunus 

persica,  B.  and  H.  ..  525 
Psendalangium 
polyosmoides,  F.  v.  M...  737 
Psidium  . . . . . . 645 

guyava,  Linn.  . . . 645 

Psoralea  . . . . . . 380 

acanthocarpa,F.  v.  M...  406 
Archeri,  F.  v.  31.  . . 382 

ausiralasica,  Sehleeht.  383 
badocana,  Benth.  . . 381 
cephalantha,  F.  v.  M.  . . 381 
cinerea,  Lindl.  . . ..  383 

Drummondii.  Meissn.  . . 383 
eriantha,  Benth.  . . 382 
Leichhardtii,  F.  v.  M.  . . 386 
leucantha,  F.  v.  31.  . . 383 

patens,  Lindl.  . . . . 382 

plumosa,  F.  v.  31.  . . 382 

pustulata,  F.  v.  31.  . . 382 

Testari®,  F.  v.  31.  ...  384 

tenax,  Lindl.  ...  ,.  383 

Pterolobium  . . . . 452 

nitens,  F.  v.  31.  . . 452 

Pultensea  ..  ..  ...  354 

aspera,  Sieb.  . . . . 353 

comnsa,  Sieb.  . . ...  353 

cuneata,  Benth.  ..  357 
eehinula,  Sieb.  . . . . 358 

rricoides,  Vent.  . . . . 352 

euehila,  DC.  . . . . 359 

ferrugine,  Rudge  . . 359 
flexilis,  Sm.  ..  . . 359 

Hartmanni.  F.  v.  31.  . . 357 

ilicifolia,  Andr.  . . 337 
juncea,  Willd.  ..  ..  347 

lanata,  Sieb.  . . . . 359 

microphylla,  Sieb.  . . 357 
Millari,  Bail.  . . . . 360 

mucronata,  Lodd.  . . 356 
myrtoides,  A.  Cunn.  ..  356 
oxalidifolia , A.  Cunn.  . . 358 
paleacea,  Willd.  . . 357 
parviflora,  Sieb.  . . 358 
petiolaris,  A.  Cunn.  ..  356 
phylicoides,  Sieb.  . . 353 
polifolia,  A Cunn.  ..  356 
polygalifolia,  Rudge  ..  359 
pycnoceplmla,  F.  v.  31.  355 

retorta,  Wendl. . . ..  361 

retusa,  Sm.  ...  ..  355 

rosmarinifolia,  Endl.  ..  356 
rosmarini folia,  Lindl.  ...  356 
rosmarinifolia,  Sieb.  . . 352 
rubicefolia,  Andr.  . . 339 
setulosa,  Benth.  , . 358 
squarrosa,  Sieb.  ..  353 
stcnophylla,  A.  Cunn.  ..  357 
Sweetii,  Don  . . . . 359 

ternata,  F.  v.  31.  . . 357 

uncinata,  A.  Cunn.  ..  357 


X 


INDEX  OF  GENERA  AND  SPECIES. 


Page 

Page 

villosa,  IV illd.  . . 

352 

Scandix 

virgata,  Sieb.  .. 

352 

glochidiata,  Labill. 

727 

viscosa,  R.  Br.  . . 

359 

Schizomeria 

539 

Punica 

679 

ovata,  D.  Don  . . 

540 

Granatum,  Linn. 

679 

Scytalis 

Pycnospora 

416 

anomala,  Vog.  . . 

435 

hedysaroides,  R.  Br.  . 

416 

retusa,  E.  Mey. 

435 

nervosa.  IV.  and  Am.  . 

416 

Sesuvium  ... 

708 

Pygeum 

525 

portulacastrum,  Linn. 

708 

Turnerianuin,  Bail. 

525 

quadrifidum,  F.  v.  M.  .. 

707 

Pyrrhotrichia 

Sesbania  ... 

397 

tuberosa,  W.  and  Arn.  . 

441 

aculeata,  Pers. 

398 

ffigyptiaea,  Pen. 

398 

Quintinia 

531 

australis,  F.  v.  M. 

399 

Fawknerii,  F.  v.  31. 

532 

coccinea,  Pers. 

398 

Quatrefagesii,  F.  v.  31. 

531 

grandiflora,  Pers. 

398 

Sieberi,  A.  DC.  . . 

531 

picta,  Pers 

398 

Verdonii,  F.  v.  31. 

532 

Sicyos 

701 

angulata,  Linn. 

701 

Rhizophora 

559 

australis,  Eudl. 

701 

niucronata,  Lain. 

569 

fretensis.  Hook. 

701 

Timoriensis,  DC. 

560 

Siebera 

718 

Rhodamnia 

651 

Billardieri,  Benth. 

719 

argentea,  Benth. 

653 

ericoides,  Benth. 

719 

Blairiana.  F.  v.  31. 

653 

linearifolia,  Benth. 

719 

sessiliflora,  Benth. 

652 

valida.  Benth.  .. 

719 

trinervia,  Blame 

652 

Sium 

725 

Rhodomyrtus 

645 

latifolium,  Linn. 

725 

cymiflora,  F.  v.  31. 

646 

Smithia 

408 

macrocarpa,  Benth. 

647 

eapitata , Desv.  . . 

408 

psidioides,  Benth. 

646 

conferta,  Sin.  ... 

408 

trineura.  F.  v.  31. 

646 

sensitiva,  2,  W.  and  Arn. 

408 

Rhynchosia  . . 

439 

Sonneratia 

678 

acuti  folia.  F.  v.  31. 

440 

acida,  Benth.  .. 

679 

australis,  Benth. 

441 

alba,  Sm. 

679 

Cunninghamii.  Benth. 

440 

mossambicensis,  Klot.  ... 

679 

ervoidea,  DC.  . . 

441 

Sophora 

446 

la.ridora,  Camb. 

441 

Fraseri,  Benth. 

447 

lucida,  DC. 

429 

juncea,  Schrad. 

347 

inedicaginca,  DC. 

441 

tomentosa,  Linn. 

447 

minima,  DC. 

440 

Spadostyles 

nuda,  DC. 

441 

concolor,  Endl. 

359 

punctata,  DC.  . . 

441 

Cunninghamii,  Benth. 

358 

rhombifolia.  DC. 

441 

ramulosa,  Endl. 

359 

virgata,  Hamilt. 

441 

Sieberi,  Benth.  . . 

360 

Rhytidandra 

ternata,  F.  v.  M. 

358 

polyosmoides,  F.  v.  M. 

737 

Sohccridiovhorum 

vitiensis,  A.  Gray 

737 

abyssinicum,  Spach. 

385 

Rosa 

529 

linifolium,  Desv. 

385 

rubiginosa,  Linn. 

529 

Sphserolobium 

346 

Rot  a la 

minus,  Labill. 

347 

apetala,  F.  v.  M. 

673 

vimineum,  Sm. 

346 

decussata,  DC.  . . 

673 

Spirseanthemum 

537 

Roxburghiana,  Wight .. 

673 

Davidsoni,  F.  v.  31. 

537 

verticillaris,  Linn. 

673 

Stereoxylon 

Rourea 

327 

cilia  tain,  Poir  . . 

582 

brachvandra,  F.  v.  31.. 

328 

crenulatuni , Poir 

584 

Rubus 

526 

Stravadium 

eglanteria,  Tratt. 

527 

rubrum,  DC. 

667 

Hillii,  F.  v.  M 

526 

Strongolodon 

428 

macropodus,  Ser. 

527 

ruber.  Vog. 

429 

moluccanus,  Linn. 

526 

Swainsona 

399 

Moorei,  F.  v.  31. 

527 

albiflora,  G.  Don 

401 

Muelleri,  Bail.  . . 

527 

brachycarpa,  Benth.  .. 

401 

parvifolius,  Linn. 

527 

campylantha,  F.  v.  31. 

402 

ribesifolius,  Sieb. 

527 

coronillcefolia,  Salisb.  . . 

401 

rossefolius,  Sm. 

527 

Fraseri,  Benth. 

405 

Z a li Ibnickneria  n i/$,E ndl.  527 

galegifolia,  R.  Br. 

401 

X dgu 

grandidora,  R.  Br.  ..  401 
Greyana,  Lindl.  . . 401 
laxa,  R.  Br.  . . . . 405 

luteola,  F.  v.  31.  ..  404 

microphylla,  A.  Gray  . . 404 
montieola,  A.  Ciuui.  ..  404 
oligophylla,  F.  v.  31.  . . 402 
oneinotropis,  F.  v.  31.  . . 403 
oroboides,  F.  v.  M.  . . 404 
Osbornii,  T.  Moore  ..  401 
parviflora,  Benth.  . . 404 
phacifolia,  F.  v.  31.  . . 403 

phacoides,  Benth.  . . 402 
procumbens,  F.  v.  31.  . . 403 
stipularis,  F.  v.  M.  . . 403 
Syncarpia  . . . . ...  638 

Hillii,  Bail.  . . . . 639 

laurifolia,  Ten.  ...  638 
leptopetala,  F.  v.  9/.  . . 639 
Syzygium 

brachynemum,  F.  v.  M.  657 
tlorihundum,  F.  v.  M.  . . 658 

Jambolanum , DC.  . . 659 

longiflorum,  Wall.  ..  659 

panieulatum , Gn.  . . 663 

Templetonia  . . . . 366 

egena.  Benth  . . . . 367 

Hookeri,  Benth.  . . 367 
Muelleri,  Benth.  ...  367 
Tephrosia  ..  ..  ...  391 

astragaloides,  R.  Br.  . . 394 
Bidwilli,  Benth.  ..  395 
croeea,  R.  Br.  . . . . 392 

filipes.  Benth.  ..  ..  394 

flammea,  F.  v.  31.  . . 392 

juncea,  R.  Br.  . . . . 394 

leptoclada.  Benth.  . . 393 
oblongata,  R.  Br.  . . 393 
oligophylla,  Benth.  . . 394 
polyzyga.  F.  v.  31.  ...  393 

porrecta.  R.  Br.  . . 393 
purpurea,  Vers.  . . 395 

reticulata,  R.  Br.  . . 392 
rosea,  F.  r.  31.  . . . . 395 

Teramnus 

clyndestinus,  Spreng.  ..  422 
Termiualia  . . ...  563 

bursarina,  F.  v.  31.  . . 565 

Catappa,  Linn.  . . 566 

ci'rcumalata,  F.  v.  31.  . . 566 
glabra,  R.  Br.  . . . . 567 

grandiflora,  Benth.  . . 568 
raelanocarpa,  F.  v.  31. . . 566 
microcarpa,  Dene.  ...  568 
microcarpa,  F.  v.  91.  . . 567 

Muelleri,  Benth.  . . 567 
oblongata,  F.  v.  31.  . . 565 

platyphylla,  F.  r.  31.  . . 567 
platyptera,  F.  v.  31.  ...  564 

porphyrocarpa,  F.  v.  31.  567 
seriocarpa,  F.  r.  31.  . . 568 

Thozetii,  Benth.  . . 566 
volucris,  R.  Br.  ..  565 
Ternatea 

vulgaris,  H.  B,  K.  . . 421 
Tetragonia  ..  ..706 

expansa,  Murr.  . . 706 


INDEX  OF  GENERA  AND  SPECIES. 


xi 


Page 

inermis , F.  v.  M.  . . 706 
Thryptomene  . . . . 581 

lionwlocalyx,  F.  v.  M.  . . 580 
oligandra,  F.  v.  .1/.  . . 581 

plicata , F.  v.  M.  ..  582 
polyandra,  F.  v.  M.  . . 582 

Tilltea  544 

adscendem,  Nees  . . 544 

colorata,  Nees  . . . . 544 

intricata,  N ees  . . ..  545 

pcdunculata,  Sieb.  ..  544 
purpurata,  Hook./.  ..  544 
recurva,  Hook.  f.  . . 545 
verticillaris,  DC.  . . 544 
verticilla ris,  Hook.  . . 545 
Traehymene  . . . . 717 

australis,  Bentli.  . . 717 
cyanopetala,  Bentli.  ..  717 
ericoides,  Sieb.  ..  ...  719 

glandulosa,  Bentli.  . . 718 
glaucifolia,  Benth.  ..  717 
incisa,  Rudye  ..  ...  718 

linearis , Spreng.  . . 719 
procumbens,  Benth.  ...  718 
subvelutina,  DC.  . . 719 
tennis,  DC.  . . . . 719 

Tvianthema  ...  . . 708 

crystallina,  Vahl.  . . 709 

cypselesides,  Benth.  . . 710 
decandra,  Linn.  ..  709 
glaucifolia,  F.  v.  M.  . . 709 
pilosa,  F.  v.  31.  . . 710 

rhynchoealyptra,  F.  v.  31.  710 
turgidifolia,  F.  v.  31.  . . 709 

Tricholobus  . . . . 328 

eonnaroides,  F.  v.  31.  . . 328 

Tric-hosanthes  . . . . 691 

cucumerina,  Linn.  ..  692 
Hearnii,  F.  v.  3J.  . . 693 

palmata.  Roxb.  ..  692 


Tage 


pentaphylla,  F.  v.  31.  . . 692 
subvelutina,  F.  v.  M.  . . 692 
Trifolium  . . . . . . 379 

procumbens,  Linn.  ..  379 
repens,  Linn.  . . . . 379 

resupinata,  Linn.  ..  379 

Trigonella  . . . . . . 377 

suavissima,  Lindl.  . . 378 
Tristania  ..  ..  ...  635 

albens,  A.  Cunn.  ..  639 
angustifolia,  Hook.  . . 640 
conferta,  R.  Br.  . . 636 
depreisa,  A.  Cunn.  . . 636 
exili  flora,  F.  v.  31.  . . 637 

lactiflua.  F.  v.  31.  . . 637 

laurina,  R.  Br.  . . . . 637 

longivalvis,  F.  v.  31.  . . 638 

vuicrophylla,  A.  Cunn. . . 636 
rliytiphloia,  F.  v.  M.  . . 636 
suaveolens,  Sm.  ..  635 
subverticillata,  Wendi.. . 636 

Uraria  ..  ..  ..  416 

cercifolia,  Desv.  . . 417 
cylindracea,  Benth.  . 417 
lagopoides,  DC.  . . 417 
picta,  Desv.  ..  ..  417 

Vacliellia 

Famesiana,  W.  and  A.  516 
Velaga 

globosa,  Gn.  ..  ..  678 

Verticordia  . . . . 576 

Cunninghamii,  Schan. . . 577 
Yicia  . . . . . . 419 

galegifolia,  Andr.  . . 401 

hirsuta,  Koch.  ..  ..  420 

sativa,  Linn.  . . . . 419 

Vigna  ..  ..  ...  433 

anomala,  Walp.  ..  435 


Page 


glabra,  Savi  ..  ..  435 

hirta,  Hook.  ..  ..434 

lanceolata,  Benth.  . . 435 
lutea,  A . Gray  . . . . 434 

luteola,  Benth.  . . . . 435 

rctusa,  Walp.  . . . . 435 

suberecta , Benth.  . . 435 
vexillata,  Benth.  ..  434 
villosa,  Savi  . . . . 435 

Viminaria  . . ..  ..  347 

denudata,  Sm.  . . . . 347 

lateriflora.  Link  . . 346 

Weinmannia  . . . . 540 

apetala,  Bail.  . . . . 542 

Benthanii,  F.  v.  31.  ..  541 

Biagiana,  F.  v.  31.  . . 541 

lachnocarpa,  F.  v.  31.  . . 542 
paniculata,  F.  v.  M.  . . 540 
paniculosa,  F.  v.  M.  . . 540 
rubifoiia,  F.  v.  3[.  . . 542 

Wistaria 

megasperma,  F.  v.  M,  . . 396 

Xanthosia  . . . . . . 720 

hirsuta,  DC 720 

Montana,  Sieb.  . . . . 720 

pilosa,  Rudye  . . . . 720 

Xanthostemon  . . . . 641 

chrysanthus,  F.  v.  31.  . . 641 
oppositifolius.  Rail.  . . 642 
pachyspermus,  F.  v.  31. 
and  Bail.  ..  ..  642 

Zehneria  . . . . . . 699 

Cunninghamii.  F.  v.  M.  700 
ejecta,  Bail.  . . . . 699 

erythrocarpa,  F.  v.  M. . . 698 
micrantha,  F.  v.  M.  ..  701 
Zornia  . . . . . . 409 

diphylla,  Pers.  . . . . 409 


VERNACULAR  NAMES. 


A bill 

Page 
...  525 

Acacia  Cedar 

..  517 

Ah-pill 

..  470 

Algoori 

..  630 

Ambool 

..  632 

Apple-tree  . . 

. . 605 

Aranyi 

..  427 

Arriga 

..  470 

Atchoourgo 

..  600 

Baka 

..  488 

Bam-bir 

..  561 

Barbaddar 

..  470 

Barror 

..  667 

Beantree  . . 

448,  456 

Belgo-belgo 

..  447 

Bichunia  . . 

..  600 

Bie  . . 

• . . 622 

Biggar 

..  620 

Bil-be-a 

..  562 

Binaroley  ... 

..  559 

Biree 

..  561 

Bishop’s  weed 

..  725 

Blackbutt  . . 

..  614 

Blackwood 

Page 
..  498 

Bloodwoo  1 

..  632 

Bloodwood  (white) 

..  633 

Blue  Gum  . . 

..  626 

Booah 

..  591 

Boolarchoo 

. . 635 

Boolbah 

..  489 

Boona 

..  632 

Boorgun 

..  511 

Bottle  Gourds 

..  693 

Bowar 

..  451 

Brazilian  Cherry 

..  657 

Brigalow  . . 

..  499 

Brisbane  Box 

..  636 

Bujir 

. . 635 

Bungadinnia 

..  662 

Bunkerman 

..  516 

Bu-poo 

. . 605 

Burra 

..  487 

Buttercup-tree 

..  638 

Carabbe 

..  517 

Carbeen 

A 630 

Cartalogoor 

..  737 

Chichm 

Page 
..  463 

Choolo-choolo 

..  641 

Cismatan 

...  463 

Clover 

..  379 

Consolation-tree  . . 

..  456 

Cooktown  Loquat 

..  647 

Cool  i bar 

..  623 

Coriander  .. 

..  726 

Country  Almond  . . 

..  566 

Curgura 

..  616 

Currijello  . . 

..  641 

Dalby  Myall 

..  497 

Dandoola  ... 

..  626 

Darling  Pea 

..  401 

Darrin  jar  ... 

. . 686 

Davidsonia  Plum  .. 

. . 538 

Dead  Finish 

..  518 

Do-anjin-jin 

..  420 

Dogwood  . . 

..  345 

Dulan 

..  489 

Durin 

..  567 

Eandi 

..  567 

Emu  Grass 

...  383 

Page 

Esie  661 

Evening  Primrose  . . 681 

Flannel  Flower  . . . . 721 

Forest  Mahogany  ...  628 

Gaja  633 

Gavgar 621 

Gidgee  495 

Gnjumgahn  514 

Gnorpin  . . . . . . 624 

Goat’s  Rue  . . . . 390 

Gooden  . . . . . . 632 

Goomurrie  . . . . 427 

Go-onje  667 

Gou-unya 633 

Granadilla  . . . . 688 

Green  Wattle  . . . . 514 

Greyanger  . . . . 734 

Guava  . . . . . . 645 

Gum-topped  Box  . . . . 619 

Gundey  Bluey  . . . . 487 

Gunthamarrah  . . . . 667 

Hare’s  Ear  ...  ..  723 

Indigo  Plant  . . . . 388 

Ironbark  (black)  . . . . 620 

Ironbark  (Lemon-scented)  622 
Ironbark  (narrow-leaved)  622 
Iron-gum  Tree  ...  ..  623 

Ironwood  . . . . . . 481 

Ironwood.  Scrub  ..  ...  649 

Ironwood  Wattle  . . . . 499 

Jequerity  . . . . . . 420 

Jerusalem  Thorn  . . 453 

Jimmy  Low  . . . . 628 

Jinbul  ..  ..  ..  623 

Jinjil  . . . . . . 632 

Johnstone  River  Hardwood  644 
Joon-da  . . . . . . 525 

Joora  . . . . . . 614 

Jo-ora  . . . . . . 667 

Kadolo  ...  ...  ..  433 

Kalaara  . . . . . . 649 

Kal-lar  441 

Kara  . . . . . . 644 

Karumbil-tree  . . . . 446 

Kennedy’s  Heath  . . ...  586 

Klmba  ..  ..  ...  634 

Kniperi  . . . . . . 667 

Komin  ..  ..  ...  433 

Kong-an  . . . . . . 424 

Koonmurri  . . . . 448 

Koorgarrie  . . . . 733 

Koorka-bidgan  ...  . . 652 

Ko-par  . . . . . . 448 

Korlbun  . . . . . . 438 

Kowarkull . . . . . . 509 

Kowinka  . . . . . . 561 

Kulcha  ..  ..  ...  633 

Kullingal  . . . . . . 617 

Kurleah  . . . . . . 623 

Kyenbooree  . . . . 600 

Lancewood  ...  ..  511 

Lar  . . . . . . 500 

Larchanama  . . . . 560 

Lightwood  . . . . 498 

Loose  Strife  . . . . 675 

Lucern  . . . . . . 378 

Mal-kan  . . . . . . 436 

Mamboo  ..  ...  ..  345 


VERNACULAR  NAMES. 

Page 


Mangoor  . . . . . . 649 

Marara  ..  ..  ...  542 

Marum  . . . . . . 595 

Matchbox  Bean  ..  ...  470 

Melilot  ..  ..  ..379 

Mel-joor-ang  ..  ..  562 

Merrany  . . . . . . 542 

Mochi-wood  ...  ..  427 

Mo-kor-ja  ..  ..  ...  445 

Mon-jin  . . . . ..511 

Moolar  ...  ...  ..  623 

Moonah  . . . . . . 602 

Moonburrie  . . . . 626 

Moorool  . . . . . . 659 

Moreton  Bay  Chestnut  . . 448 

Mor-ngi  ..  ..  ..  600 

Morni-li-an  . . . . 430 

Mountain  Oak  . . . . 640 

Mulga  . . . . . . 505 

Mullar  ...  . . . . 520 

Mullet  ..  ..  ..  618 

Mungar  . . . . . . 626 

Musk-wood  ..  ..  737 

Nankoor  . . . . . . 605 

Nar-gul  ..  ..  ..441 

Narm-boon-bong  ..  ..  633 

Narran  . . . . . . 487 

Neram  . . . . . . 527 

New  Zealand  Spinach  . . 706 

Ngeen-jerry  . . . . 398 

Nonda-tree  . . . . 529 

Ogarrah  . . . . . . 499 

Olm-bah  . . . . . . 634 

Oloorgo  . . . . . . 661 

Oodgeroo  . . . . . . 600 

Oombar  . . . . . . 621 

Oon-doo  ...  ..  ..471 

Oo-ray  ..  ...  ..  538 

Ootcho  ..  ...  ..  667 

Orange  Mangrove  . . 561 

Ori  . . . . . . . . 630 

Pand-ja  ..  ..  ..441 

Papaw  . . . . . . 690 

Parpangata  . . . . 470 

Passionfruit  . . . . 688 

Peach-tree  . . . . 525 

Peebeen  . . . . . . 639 

Pegunny  . . . . . . 467 

Pie  Melon  . . . . . . 697 

Pomegranate  . . . . 679 

Poorga  . . . . . . 599 

Poplar  Box  . . . . 618 

Poplar  Gum  (broad-leaved)  627 
Poonga  Oil-tree  . . . . 446 

Pornupan  . . . . . . 679 

Pudginjacker  . . . . 661 

Pumpkin  . . . . . . 698 

Pun-dar  Pun-dar  . . . . 420 

Prickly  Pear  . . . . 704 

Ean-na  . . . . . . 524 

Raspberry  . . . . . . 527 

Red  Mangrove  . . . . 561 

Red  Sandalwood  . . . . 471 

Redwood,  Scrub  ..  ..  542 

Roangga 628 

Rokowara  . . . . . . 471 

Rosewood  . . . . . . 509 

Ru 424 

Rusty  Gum  . . . . 605 


Scribbly  Gum 
Shuttlecock  Flower 
Spotted  Gum 

Squirting  Cucumber  697. 
Strawberry,  Indian 
Stringybark  (broad-leaved) 
Stringybark  (red) 
Stringybark  (rough) 
Stringybark  (white) 

Swamp  Mahogany 

Sweet  Briar 

Sweet  Verbena-tree 

Tallow-wood 

Tandaji 

Tandoor 

Tantoon 

'J'a-ra 

Teheergum 

Tchilgar  .. 

Tchunba 

Teak 

Tee 

Thalmera  .. 

Thorow-wax 
Thow-i-ee  ... 

Thozet’s  Box 

Toi 

Tom-min  . . 

Tom  Russell’s  Mahognny 

Tooloo 

Too-ta 

Torakal 

Towel  Gourd 

Tubbil-pulla 

Turpentine-tree  . . 

Urar 

Urona 

Urrgula 

Waargoon-waargoon 
Wackay 
Wai-gen 
Walkaran  . . 

Waneu 
War-roon  . . 

Water  Gum 
Water  Melon 
Water  Parsnip 
Water  Purslane  ... 
Weeping  Myall  . . 

White  Apple  . . 659, 

Wliitewood  (Mowbulan)  . . 
Wo-in-ya  .. 

Wommo 
Wong-arrah 
Wongoola  . . 

Wonkara  . . 

Wooller-wooller 

Woonara 

Woorboon... 

Woorgun  . . 

Wooroola  . . 

Yadtbor 

Yananoleu 

Yapunyah.. 

Yarra 
Yarrah 
Yellow  Jacket 

Yellow  Wood  

Yoo-a-bal 


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686 

634 
699 

528 
614 
628 
613 

613 

635 

529 
644 
616 
436 
622 
589 

511 

614 
509 
630 
468 
616 
467 
723 
519 
623 
614 
566 
640 
499 
394 
441 
694 

636 
638 

634 

635 
630 

660 

448 

413 

660 

516 

512 

637 
697 
725 
675 
496 
660 
734 
524 
382 
495 
627 
630 
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630 
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619 

620 

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